I went to the Colorado School of Trades, it was a great school, I loved it.
There are other good schools.
My wife was very supportave, found a full time job there and we moved, I got a student loan.
I went to school during the day, fighting shop lifters every night working at a super K Mart.
Any gunsmithing school if you really apply yourself will make you a decent beginning smith, but not a full fledged gunsmith, best to work for a good smith afterword, then go out on your own, there is just too much you have to know. You will not be a qualified gunsmith graduating from any school no matter what they tell you.
I worked for a very good old smith before going to CST, it was a huge help, he also had gun repair manuels from the manufacturers that they stopped producing some years ago, I copied at least 8, 4' binders of info from him and bought every gunsmith book available, many on e bay at a savaings.
A good library is a lifesaver.
Nothing but time, experience and some good guidence when new will make you into a smith, just not enough time to learn more than the basics at gunsmithing schools.
Until you have been a smith, most have no idea just how much you really have to know.
A very good basic knowledge of how guns work will help you figure out guns you have not worked on before.
If possible offer to work for a smith at no pay as I did and try to find a machining class you can attend before going, you have to be a good machinest.
It's not an easy road, but it can be done, I did it and built up a good business. Started the web site www.savagegunsmithing.com, specializing in accurizing Savages, built the business up pretty good by doing good work and giving great service.
Hurt my back badly, had to retire. Gave the web business to a friend, master gunsmith, he has done very well with it.
You will never get rich, the start up costs are great, the costs for tooling, materials and consumables is there every month and then uncle sam. It costs far more than most realize, every tool is $40.00 to $100.00 or more.
You have to have a true love for guns because it is a labor of love, you can make enough to live OK if you have a wife who works and who gets insurance for the family, but don't expect to make a good living from it. One smith can only do so much work and charge so much.
If you decide to do it, have a wife who works and gets benifits for the family, get a full time or part time job, open in the afternoons, evenings and weekends. Have your shop so people cannot see where the work is done, mine was not like that and until I got my fill sized lathe, mill etc, I had more than a few people walk out because they expected to see a fully equipped shop, even though I could have done what they needed.
Do what you can and find a good smith to farm out what work you cannot do, take the work in, mark it up a little, you get the customers that way.
In time, you will gain experience, equip your shop and do well.
It takes years to become a very good smith. Know your limitations, read everthing you can, I spent a great deal of money on books, old one's new one's, gunsmithing, machine work etc, every book I could find, you get something good from each one. Don't expect to find any books on repairing newer guns, you had better know how guns operate and have a good mind for figuring things out. Wreck a gun, you pay for it. I never did, but had to buy a few new parts, not many thank God.
You will be working on guns all the time, even once you have gone full time, by then you should have a backlog of work. Your friends will be out shooting and hunting, you will be working on guns.
It takes time to build a good reputation, mess up just a few guns and word spreads like wildfire in your area, it can kill a business.
When I retired, I sold a lot of my equipment and tools, but kept enough to do work on my guns, bought a small lathe and mill, drill press and now I just work on my own guns, I am having a great time buying fixers and restoring them. Now I have real fun.
Many fail, even after going to school. Whatever you do, try to find a smith to work for after getting out of school, it's hard to do, most don't have the money to pay for additional help, you can go to work for a manufacturer and be a parts installer, not much fun.
Yes, I'm trying to talk you out of it. Almost all the younger students without life experiences, skills and knowing how to run a business failed. You can never forget it's a business, not a hobby or you will fail.
If you are very motivated, have the means to keep a roof over your head, you won't make any money for at least 2 to 3 years by the time you have equipped your shop, love guns, maybe you can make a go of it.
It's a tough way to make a living, but if you can it is very rewarding, I loved it. I got there, but it was not an easy road. I got some good breaks working for tha good smith before and after attending school. By the time I opened my own shop, I knew enough to not ruin guns, fix them, modify them, accurize, rebarrel, make my own parts from scratch and keep my customers happy, became a pretty fair but not expert machinest. Farmed out bluing and parkerizing until I got my own set ups.
Not everyone is so lucky.I was very good at figuring out what was wrong with firearms because I took the time to really find out how they work. Got all 4.0's in the repair section of school, finished earily and became a student instructor the last month and a half. Told the head instructor I wanted the hardest guns to fix, no easy one's. he gave me a shot and I proved myself to him, got the worst of the worst, only way to learn, many younger students just wnted easy guns so they could get to the part where they build guns for themselves, I doubt even one of them ever became a smith.
I was a very good smith at the end, but not a master smith, very few of them around.
As I said, you will never know just how much you have to know, how much equipment you will need, the time it takes. It takes far longer to figure things out correctly when new than after you have been doing it for some years and time is money, you have to keep fixing, modifying etc guns and get them out the door as fast as you can, without taking any short cuts, they must be 100% right to make a living, you have to knw what makes a gun safe and when it's unsafe, you can get someone killed with what you don't know or if you do something wrong. No time to shoot the breeze and have a drink with your friends till after hours. You will work 10 to 12 hours a day, sometimes 7 days a week, at least 6, that is once you have built up a customer base.
It's the worst and best job one can have. Family life will suffer, don't count on 2 week vacations or too many days off when you don't open the doors because you want to do something else. That is not to say you cannot do those things, but all that you promised you will have their guns done by a particular date may have to get pushed back, do that too many times, they will go somewhere else. Don't discount prices, but never gouge someone, be fair and honest. If a gun that should take 1/2 hour to fix takes 4, most of the time you eat the expenses unless there are other curcomstances and then you had better calll the owner.
Think about it hard, if married, you had better have an understanding wife who loves you very much or you won't stay married long.
My Best, John