Found this on Quora of all places.
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What is a Gunsmith?
Being a Gunsmith is a lot of things…
It’s cleaning 30 years worth of gummed up 3-in-1 oil and powder residue out of a an old .22.
It’s mounting a $50 scope to a $3000 rifle, because that’s what the customer wants.
It’s mounting a $2500 scope to a $300 rifle, because that’s what the customer wants.
It’s fine tuning the trigger on an Anschutz target rifle that the owner will be going to the Olympic tryouts with.
It’s figuring out why a hunting rifle that used to shoot 1″ groups, now shoots 6″ groups.
It’s making a new spring for a revolver they quit making parts for in 1943.
It’s explaining that grand-dads old rifle that has hunted for 3 generations, and never been cleaned or maintained, is beyond saving… (restoring would cost $3000 for a rifle you can still buy new for $700)… then doing the work anyway.
It’s refinishing a wood rifle stock with meticulous sanding, fitting, filling, and finishing until it’s like a fine piece of furniture.
It’s taking a poorly fitting scope mount on a fine rifle, and fitting it properly to make the rifle shoot like a fine target rifle.
It’s building a target rifle from an action and a bucket of parts.
It’s welding on a new bolt handle and polishing it.
It’s cutting and fitting, and chambering a new barrel to a rifle.
It’s taking a rusty, ugly, old pistol from the 60’s, and refinishing it in a “bright blue” to look like it was made yesterday - and the owner expecting to pay $50 for those 100 hours of work because Colts factory brochure from 1962 said it was $50.
It’s taking a hunting rifle that the owner has given up on getting to shoot, and narrowing your eyes at it and saying to yourself “Oh, you aren’t beating ME!”.
It’s cleaning up an old .22 for “Dad” so he can give it to his daughter for Christmas… it was dads first rifle, and it’s her first rifle so they can go shooting together. THAT job you do for the cost of the parts…
It’s filing a new front sight out of a block of steel for an old coot who is convinced he knows how tall the front sight should be, and then re-doing it six times because he won’t listen when you told him the first five times how tall it SHOULD be… Him you charge triple time for… stubborn old bastard…
It’s dreading seeing yet another old Reminton 760 pump rifle come into the shop.
It’s your eyes lighting up when a gorgeous old German Scheutzen rifle comes in and you get to examine it.
It’s that feeling when you’re the first one to take the lockplate off an old British Snider rifle made in the 1860’s, and see the chiseled initials of the maker inside… and from all the crud you cleaned out, you KNOW you’re only the second person to ever see it.
It’s being a young ladies first shooting instructor, and seeing her face when she shoots her first “perfect” score on the target.
It’s a damn heap of work, and a lot of self-teaching in half a dozen major trades… Machining, welding, jewelry making, metal finishing, woodworking, wood finishing, etc…
If none of these in this list make you smile and say “Yeah, I want to do this…” then nothing I say is going to convince you, and you shouldn’t bother.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
What is a Gunsmith?
Being a Gunsmith is a lot of things…
It’s cleaning 30 years worth of gummed up 3-in-1 oil and powder residue out of a an old .22.
It’s mounting a $50 scope to a $3000 rifle, because that’s what the customer wants.
It’s mounting a $2500 scope to a $300 rifle, because that’s what the customer wants.
It’s fine tuning the trigger on an Anschutz target rifle that the owner will be going to the Olympic tryouts with.
It’s figuring out why a hunting rifle that used to shoot 1″ groups, now shoots 6″ groups.
It’s making a new spring for a revolver they quit making parts for in 1943.
It’s explaining that grand-dads old rifle that has hunted for 3 generations, and never been cleaned or maintained, is beyond saving… (restoring would cost $3000 for a rifle you can still buy new for $700)… then doing the work anyway.
It’s refinishing a wood rifle stock with meticulous sanding, fitting, filling, and finishing until it’s like a fine piece of furniture.
It’s taking a poorly fitting scope mount on a fine rifle, and fitting it properly to make the rifle shoot like a fine target rifle.
It’s building a target rifle from an action and a bucket of parts.
It’s welding on a new bolt handle and polishing it.
It’s cutting and fitting, and chambering a new barrel to a rifle.
It’s taking a rusty, ugly, old pistol from the 60’s, and refinishing it in a “bright blue” to look like it was made yesterday - and the owner expecting to pay $50 for those 100 hours of work because Colts factory brochure from 1962 said it was $50.
It’s taking a hunting rifle that the owner has given up on getting to shoot, and narrowing your eyes at it and saying to yourself “Oh, you aren’t beating ME!”.
It’s cleaning up an old .22 for “Dad” so he can give it to his daughter for Christmas… it was dads first rifle, and it’s her first rifle so they can go shooting together. THAT job you do for the cost of the parts…
It’s filing a new front sight out of a block of steel for an old coot who is convinced he knows how tall the front sight should be, and then re-doing it six times because he won’t listen when you told him the first five times how tall it SHOULD be… Him you charge triple time for… stubborn old bastard…
It’s dreading seeing yet another old Reminton 760 pump rifle come into the shop.
It’s your eyes lighting up when a gorgeous old German Scheutzen rifle comes in and you get to examine it.
It’s that feeling when you’re the first one to take the lockplate off an old British Snider rifle made in the 1860’s, and see the chiseled initials of the maker inside… and from all the crud you cleaned out, you KNOW you’re only the second person to ever see it.
It’s being a young ladies first shooting instructor, and seeing her face when she shoots her first “perfect” score on the target.
It’s a damn heap of work, and a lot of self-teaching in half a dozen major trades… Machining, welding, jewelry making, metal finishing, woodworking, wood finishing, etc…
If none of these in this list make you smile and say “Yeah, I want to do this…” then nothing I say is going to convince you, and you shouldn’t bother.