DR_2297
Silver $$ Contributor
The business side is a part time job on top of the full time job of making actual $. The ins and outs of accounting and taxes and collecting and remitting alone are enough to bring anyone’s mood down.
I do this part time right now as I work full time as an engineer for the biggest of the Big 3. I figure I have 10 years left before I want to “retire” and turn my part time gig into a full time (ish) gig to pay the bills and minimize drawing from retirement funds. I am not cheap and I am not expensive. Everything I have is paid for and adequate for turning out world class work for the work I do. At this time I refuse to pay myself less per hour to work for myself than my employer pays me per hour. Some ppl though think it’s still 1995 and everyone should work for $20/hr
My Dad owned his own business for 30 years. When he passed I had the pleasure of figuring everything associated with it out. He was self taught and to take care of all of the financial aspects of his S Corp he paid a CPA VERY well. There is no way I could absorb those costs on the income from my business so I need to learn the ways of the business world.
I am actually in process of applying to graduate school to work on my MBA. I figure it will aid me in this last quarter of my primary career and will benefit my little smithing / machining business now and into the future. Especially the marketing, entrepreneurial and account aspects.
So that brings up a question. From walk up to the lathe to barreled action ready to return to customer, how long does it take the rest of you using a manual lathe? I am right about 4 hours at this moment, best ever is 3 hours when all stars aligned. That’s disassemble rifle / action / bolt, setup blank through head stock, direct indicating, thru muzzle coolant, thread, chamber, crown, engrave, install, reassemble. That’s as long as the barrel lends itself to not fighting me to indicate.
I do this part time right now as I work full time as an engineer for the biggest of the Big 3. I figure I have 10 years left before I want to “retire” and turn my part time gig into a full time (ish) gig to pay the bills and minimize drawing from retirement funds. I am not cheap and I am not expensive. Everything I have is paid for and adequate for turning out world class work for the work I do. At this time I refuse to pay myself less per hour to work for myself than my employer pays me per hour. Some ppl though think it’s still 1995 and everyone should work for $20/hr
My Dad owned his own business for 30 years. When he passed I had the pleasure of figuring everything associated with it out. He was self taught and to take care of all of the financial aspects of his S Corp he paid a CPA VERY well. There is no way I could absorb those costs on the income from my business so I need to learn the ways of the business world.
I am actually in process of applying to graduate school to work on my MBA. I figure it will aid me in this last quarter of my primary career and will benefit my little smithing / machining business now and into the future. Especially the marketing, entrepreneurial and account aspects.
So that brings up a question. From walk up to the lathe to barreled action ready to return to customer, how long does it take the rest of you using a manual lathe? I am right about 4 hours at this moment, best ever is 3 hours when all stars aligned. That’s disassemble rifle / action / bolt, setup blank through head stock, direct indicating, thru muzzle coolant, thread, chamber, crown, engrave, install, reassemble. That’s as long as the barrel lends itself to not fighting me to indicate.










