How to Become a Professional Gun Designer

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2024
  • / forgottenweapons
    www.floatplane...
    Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! shop.bbtv.com/c...
    The introductory clip was from my interview with Tony Neophytou, a talented and successful South African firearms designer (his work includes the Neostead 2000, Inkunzi PAW, and NTW-20 rifle). He doesn't mince words; it's a very difficult field to succeed in - and I regularly get inquiries from high school and college students asking how they can do what he has done.
    My answer, in short, is that is you enjoy hands-on fabrication you should get an education as a machinist. If you don't enjoy that work, you should pursue a career unrelated to guns and make them your hobby. I think that has a much better chance of leading you to happiness and success. For a more detailed written take on the question, I would refer you to my blog post on the subject:
    www.forgottenw...
    Contact:
    Forgotten Weapons
    6281 N. Oracle #36270
    Tucson, AZ 85740

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @GECX-mj4vc
    @GECX-mj4vc 4 года назад +882

    Drops SKS into tapco stock.
    "I am a gun designer"

    • @bohica76
      @bohica76 4 года назад +30

      @@bmstylee Pipe on a 2x4, shotgun gunsmith

    • @m1a2abrams52
      @m1a2abrams52 4 года назад +3

      @@bohica76 starnk

    • @GECX-mj4vc
      @GECX-mj4vc 4 года назад +9

      @@bmstylee I raise to stippling a punisher skull into a 40 cal shield

    • @LosCadaver
      @LosCadaver 4 года назад +2

      But, I want to be an Armoured Vehicle Engineer.

    • @hockeymaskbob2942
      @hockeymaskbob2942 4 года назад +2

      Puts tapco stock on 10/22 Gum shmit

  • @PhotekHD
    @PhotekHD 4 года назад +1210

    How do I become a gun designer?
    “Don’t.”

    • @beyondsingularity
      @beyondsingularity 4 года назад +43

      I haven't even seen the video yet and I already know that this is the conclusion. :)

    • @mattandrews8528
      @mattandrews8528 4 года назад +21

      The classified progress the military industrial complex has made internally is different than it has been throughout history. Why be a gun designer when we have a secret space force using secret gauss rifles and who knows what else, maybe ray guns and anti matter guns? While the military is evolving its firearms in the white world, the black world is centuries ahead of the curve. There’s not point in being an aerospace engineer either in today’s day and age.

    • @karliszauers1
      @karliszauers1 4 года назад +151

      @Matt Andrews Did you watch black panther and thought it is a documentary?

    • @cheetochinpo
      @cheetochinpo 4 года назад +89

      @@mattandrews8528 why be an aerospace engineer when you can be a literal space wizard and wield super secret illuminati magi-tech

    • @flare9757
      @flare9757 4 года назад +25

      *Laughs in Ronnie Barret making the M-82 in his garage.*
      I do not know if this is true, but I heard it somewhere.

  • @DP-fq7iy
    @DP-fq7iy 4 года назад +706

    *Attaches an EoTech to a rail.*
    “I’m a gunsmith.”

  • @BenXu1
    @BenXu1 4 года назад +763

    This is just good life advice too.

    • @StrangerInAStrangeLand1999
      @StrangerInAStrangeLand1999 4 года назад +27

      Yup. Trying to turn a hobby into a job frequently causes people to hate their hobby.

    • @aritakalo8011
      @aritakalo8011 4 года назад +16

      Even if one wanted to design..... Best option is to go to mechanical engineering or other relevant general engineering field. Quick look at career pages at big companies says the most likely engineering position is stuff like manufacturing engineer. Most likely no big gun company is going to announce "apply to be our designer". No they first look inside on their own engineering staff. Who here has experience and we know is reliable person. Since new design is serious investment. They won't let just any hot shot do it. Most likely there is whole team lead by some very senior in company.
      Instead there is needs for dozens of junior mechanical and production engineers to make sure the senior designers vision gets implemented correct and the production quality stays constant.
      The age of swash buckling gun designer is long over (unless one can self finance being such person aka the hobby route Ian talks). The main companies are serious engineering companies, which means engineering is lot of calculus, checking and testing and lots of inspection report paper work. "This set of barrels has correct metallurgy as per test X, say I junior manufacturing engineer john doe." If you do that often enough, maybe one gets to even take part in developing the new heat treat regime or testing of deciding that the new suggested regime isn't any better than current one "so say we 5 testing engineers after couple months of R&D work".
      Most likely any new design would be lot of CAD and simulation software estimating stresses on the gun from firing and tweaking those and testing prototypes to see, if the models and prototype match. Lots of exploding virtual powder inside virtual brass inside a virtual chamber simulating chamber pressures, structural stresses and so on. Then tweaking this metallurgy or that treatment in model or changing this or that angle by 1 degree and maybe that spring is 1% stiffers. Lets test does the prototype match the model in real firing. okay prototype and models match. modeling engineers and testing engineers agree. We can move forward. Manufacturing engineers, make happen what modeling engineers have specced in the models and CADs. Testing engineers, make sure manufacturing line makes things as specified in model and product and models still match.

    • @GurtTarctor
      @GurtTarctor 4 года назад +15

      I started off wanting to do cabinet making, fine furniture, that kind of stuff. Took half a college course to realise I didn't want to work in that industry, the noise, dust, time pressure and other bullshit. I've circled back around to woodworking though in the form of carving found wood using a small number of basic hand tools, far more relaxing and enjoyable. I would have grown to hate wood and lose the passion had I kept on trying to get into the 'industry' side of it.

    • @donwalsh9426
      @donwalsh9426 4 года назад +1

      @@GurtTarctor Took a cabinetmaking diploma course at college. Tramped around, shopped my resume, got a job, and found out the industry is a hard go, and the shop lays you off at the end of every contract. I work on my own projects now, but I needed a more reliable job. Sometimes ideas just don't work out as expected.

    • @tykeith496
      @tykeith496 4 года назад

      Forgotten Weapons:
      One stop shop.

  • @GRANDMASTER3D
    @GRANDMASTER3D 4 года назад +930

    Wow! I never wanted to design guns until now! You really convinced me! Im going to quit my job and invest all my money in a bull pup water cooled black powder pistol design!

    • @mattg706
      @mattg706 4 года назад +154

      My credit card is ready

    • @Roberta-yf4ge
      @Roberta-yf4ge 4 года назад +90

      It needs to be fully automatic semi auto black powder

    • @MolsonMuscle
      @MolsonMuscle 4 года назад +53

      Please also design a blish lock open bolt bombard cannon, that is a niche market that has not been tapped into yet.

    • @BlackCat-tc2tv
      @BlackCat-tc2tv 4 года назад +39

      Steam powered laser sight?

    • @Zorro9129
      @Zorro9129 4 года назад +4

      Crowdfund it on GoFundMe

  • @bikecommuter24
    @bikecommuter24 4 года назад +512

    How to make a million as a gun designer
    Start with two million and know when to quit.

    • @TheStraycat74
      @TheStraycat74 4 года назад +23

      goes hand in hand with the old joke: do you know how to make a small fortune as an owner operator in the trucking industry? Start with a large fortune...
      as a 17 OTR trucker I was NEVER Stupid enough to become an owner operator. I'd only just finished Fixing my credit to the point I'd even consider becoming an o/o when the rug got yanked out from under me and it'll be 3-5 YEARS before I can get back into it... which means HAD I Bought a $250,000 bobtail (truck no trailer) then I'd be in the hole a quarter million with no income right now.
      I still have no income, but I don't have 35,000 pounds of useless metal sitting in my driveway right now

    • @ScottKenny1978
      @ScottKenny1978 4 года назад +15

      Also: how to make a small fortune in the motorcycle or aviation industry?
      Start with a large fortune!

    • @viliusmc5171
      @viliusmc5171 2 года назад

      ,

  • @FirepowerUnited
    @FirepowerUnited 4 года назад +174

    Lawyer, doctor, engineer... I didn’t know Ian was an Asian parent!

    • @thomaschongs3456
      @thomaschongs3456 4 года назад +2

      Oh snap 😑🤣

    • @DiggingForFacts
      @DiggingForFacts 4 года назад +4

      There's a reason those are associated with the "Asian parent" stereotype. Those careers are well-paying and socially recognized professions with a certain status: certain things that most people (not just Asian parents) associate with people "succeeding" in the world. They also are a lot broader in terms of things you can do with them than "go into IT".

    • @thomaschongs3456
      @thomaschongs3456 4 года назад +15

      @@DiggingForFacts try digging for humor.

    • @DiggingForFacts
      @DiggingForFacts 4 года назад +5

      @@thomaschongs3456 Well to be fair, I tried to radiocarbon date the joke because it seemed so ancient. Turns out that didn't work because it's the underlying latent racism that's the outdated part. So I suppose my initial methodology was wrong.

    • @thomaschongs3456
      @thomaschongs3456 4 года назад +7

      @@DiggingForFacts wait your shovel just hit something, was that a giggle.

  • @smic1961
    @smic1961 4 года назад +661

    I have been involved in "gun design" from the Industrial Design aspect. I have worked with Savage and developed their Accufit stock and the new Renegauge semi auto shotgun. I would love to share that often overlooked perspective with you!

    • @xirensixseo
      @xirensixseo 4 года назад +16

      that would be so interesting

    • @buckeyebeliever3397
      @buckeyebeliever3397 4 года назад +12

      So is that the paper and pencil (CAD) part of “design?”

    • @smic1961
      @smic1961 4 года назад +84

      @@buckeyebeliever3397 Yes... paper, pencil, models, mock-ups , ergonomics, aesthetics, and working with the engineers and manufacturing to get the vision into cost effective production

    • @samuel88andrews
      @samuel88andrews 4 года назад +18

      @@smic1961 hey man I'm doing a CNC certification with my community college and learning some CAD programs right now. What CAD program do you think is more used in the industry because my school offers solidworks and maker (I think that's the name of the other one). Right now I'm working with AutoCad because it's a prerequisite for those courses. I have been leaning towards solid works because my brother's friend got a job developing medical tools literally only because he knew solid works and he's currently making bank. I'd appreciate some advice because asking "what software is more useful for the firearms industry" would probably get my ass a trip down to the campus police because my state is hella anti 2A.

    • @smic1961
      @smic1961 4 года назад +36

      @@samuel88andrews I have only worked with Savage and HK-USA, and both of them are using Solid Works

  • @CrudeConduct666
    @CrudeConduct666 4 года назад +642

    Until somebody creates the .50 BMG Revolver, I've got work to do.

    • @hackerbot809
      @hackerbot809 4 года назад +71

      I feel bad for your wrists

    • @CrudeConduct666
      @CrudeConduct666 4 года назад +55

      @@hackerbot809 you should xD I'm not the nicest to them. So far the biggest I got is the BFR in .45-70gov. and I've taught myself to love it. I think I have a caliber addiction. I need more! More lead! More powder! Longer brass! Broke wrists! XD oh yeah

    • @juanordonezgalban2278
      @juanordonezgalban2278 4 года назад +29

      You could add a muzzle break to mitigate recoil and then exchange the barrel itself for another muzzle break to completely eliminate it.

    • @CrudeConduct666
      @CrudeConduct666 4 года назад +27

      @@juanordonezgalban2278 do what now? I don't think a gun with no barrel will work well. A pepperbox .50bmg sounds too brutal to even consider

    • @ArcturusOTE
      @ArcturusOTE 4 года назад +15

      Ah yes, H3VR's Triple Regret boomstick

  • @frankdindl790
    @frankdindl790 4 года назад +216

    Ronnie Barrett wasn’t an engineer. He’s a damn fine gun designer though.
    There are many great gun designers. Not many have achieved huge commercial success. Gaston Glock wasn’t a gun designer, but he had other skills that led to him designing the most popular handgun on the planet.
    Ian’s advice is spot on.

    • @kovona
      @kovona 4 года назад +15

      Didn't Glock started out making plastic shower curtain rings?

    • @laramiefrank479
      @laramiefrank479 4 года назад +39

      @@kovona and I bet they were damn fine shower curtain rings

    • @viliusmc5171
      @viliusmc5171 2 года назад

      \

    • @somebody1241
      @somebody1241 Год назад +2

      @@kovona they were making knifes for Austrian Army

  • @ttrguy9952
    @ttrguy9952 4 года назад +100

    I worked for 5 years as the head engineer at Mossberg in the Shotgun receiver department. While there, I had to interact with the design engineers. I got to make a LOT of improvements while there but, NOT, without a lot of verification and final testing before they went into production. For a GREEN person to enter the field, First, it's an industry that has already established itself, Second, as a gun manufacturer is already making their own product, anything you could do to affect a change is less than zero. If you fail anything while working at a high level, you WILL be terminated. This is the highest pressure job that you could ever have! I was responsible for 11,000 perfect receivers per week. If someone wants to design guns, start your own company....

    • @nonyabiz9487
      @nonyabiz9487 2 года назад +10

      I hear good things about Kel Tec.. People talk trash about them but hey you know what? They have a lot of freedom to design cool stuff and most importantly there new designs actually work... Most of the time that is... They got some excellent innovative firearms and some dumpster fires but hey they keep comin up with new stuff and they just keep goin so who cares I say go with them or some of the other manufactures in the Cocoa Florida location like Diamondback would be good too.

  • @pavo_9768
    @pavo_9768 4 года назад +78

    Dicoverd this channel around 5 or 6 years ago, that is how long i have been waiting for Ian to post this video

    • @12345NoNamesLeft
      @12345NoNamesLeft 4 года назад +2

      you missed this one then
      ruclips.net/video/KGdl1Vvf8jk/видео.html

    • @rabbitbabbit7311
      @rabbitbabbit7311 4 года назад

      Same here first video I ever saw of this channel was the one on the FAMAS

  • @mikeryan5704
    @mikeryan5704 4 года назад +62

    Some of the best most down to earth advice regarding professional development I have heard on a RUclips channel in a long time.

  • @BushcraftingBogan
    @BushcraftingBogan 4 года назад +219

    Last time I was this early someone thought the Zip 22 was a brilliant design

    • @LURKTec
      @LURKTec 4 года назад +7

      There was a point where someone thought that... thing was a brilliant design?

    • @DarkhalfBreed
      @DarkhalfBreed 4 года назад +6

      @@LURKTec i thought it looked intresting, maybe a little cool, untill i saw it in someone's hands and saw them "shoot" it.

    • @dELTA13579111315
      @dELTA13579111315 4 года назад +13

      It IS a brilliant design! Everybody needs a way to practice jam clearing drills

    •  4 года назад +3

      the first time I saw one of those things in the dealer showcase, I thought to myself that ian would have it on his show. I just thought he might be quite a bit older by then.

  • @splunky6314
    @splunky6314 4 года назад +192

    Sounds like an intresting career. If I were to go through with it, I'd probably do the second option.
    "Puts bump stock on musket"

    • @rippervtol9516
      @rippervtol9516 4 года назад +13

      I have put a quad rail,red dot, laser, light, and front grip on a musket just to irritate the "tacticool" crowd :D

    • @samhansen9771
      @samhansen9771 4 года назад +5

      @@rippervtol9516 I think that would irritate a few more people than the tacticool crowd!

    • @thomaschongs3456
      @thomaschongs3456 4 года назад +6

      @@rippervtol9516 you should take it to a civil war reenactment and piss some more people off.

    • @Halinspark
      @Halinspark 4 года назад +4

      @@rippervtol9516 I tell people who buy a Henry lever action from my job that they should mount a fancy red dot, flashlight, and maybe bayonet on it just to annoy people at the range. Bonus if you can figure out a grenade launcher, even if it doesn't work.

    • @TheCaptNoname
      @TheCaptNoname 4 года назад +1

      Grenade launcher? Only the muzzle-mounted one - I don't see how an underslung one could fit there. Unless...

  • @Ebolson1019
    @Ebolson1019 4 года назад +18

    I’m reminded of a phrase from Drachinifel, “the best British invention came from old men in flat caps working in their garage”

  • @kevinelliott9679
    @kevinelliott9679 4 года назад +12

    As someone that went to Gunsmithing school straight out of high school, worked for a small rifle company for 6 months and then 7 years as a Gunsmith in a gun store, he hit the nail on the head. My early gunsmith work would have went much smoother if I had went to CNC machinist school first and then dine gunsmithing as a side gig, at this time I work in the oilfield and am working towards having a side gig Gunsmith shop in the future.

  • @kronoar
    @kronoar 4 года назад +15

    Ian, I don't know if you will ever see this comment but I wanted to thank you for this.
    A few years ago I decided to go back to school to become a mechanical engineer for the sole purpose of becoming a firearm designer. It was going to be an uphill battle to get back into school and to make it in my program, but I did it because I am so passionate about firearms. This semester, about halfway through my degree, I came down with a really bad flu and missed a few weeks of classes. I decided rather than risk failing my classes I would take the semester off. I had also been getting really burnt out with Mechanical Engineering and wasn't interested in what I was learning anymore.
    The past month has been really hard on me because I've been racking my brain trying to decide if this is really the direction I want my life to go. I've been depressed and confused because the goal I had doesn't seem like it will bring me joy in my life.
    Your video and advice has helped me more than you could know, and it's timing is perfect. I think I am finally ready to admit that this isn't the path for me and to continue on would be foolish. I still have a burning passion for firearms, and my biggest goal is to still one day see a firearm with my name on the side. But like you said, doing it as a hobby is a much smarter decision. Hopefully in the next few month I can decide on a better career for myself that will make me enough to support my family and afford my hobby.
    Thank you again Ian.

    • @kronoar
      @kronoar Год назад +2

      @@Cam64viper Honestly that's super hard because I don't know exactly where you're coming from and what your goals are in life. If your biggest motivation in life is money and an easy/stable career path then absolutely stick with it. ME is hard as hell, but If you have a lot of perseverance and a little bit of smarts you can do it.
      Because I don't know anything about you I wouldn't feel good giving you advice, but what I can do is tell you the path I took.
      For a little bit of background on me, I was never the brilliant kid, but I was always in the "smart" group. I knew that I had smarts but never knew what to do with them. I really struggled with university because of that. My family is mostly blue collar and advised me to just pick something, even if I didn't enjoy it, because jobs are for making money. I didn't want that. I didn't want to spend 1/3 of my life working a job I hate just so that I can continue living, which is to say keep going to work. I wanted to do something I enjoyed, even if it meant I didn't make as much money. That being said I also knew I had to be realistic. People who say "follow your dreams" only do so because they got extremely lucky in life and their dreams were profitable. The number of struggling artists are proof that following your dreams doesn't work for the majority of people.
      Now back to what I chose. I knew that ME wasn't right and follow my dream of being a firearm designer wasn't realistic. But I had also put so much time and money into university that It would be a shame to ditch everything, drop out, and go to a trade school or something. I didn't want to do something I hated, and I knew pursuing a dream wouldn't work out, so I chose a middle option. One of my friends had recently starting pursuing a minor in UAS (drones) and convinced me to take a class with him. While it wasn't a huge passion of mine, it was definitely something that held my interest and allowed me to both work with my hands and my mind. I talked to an advisor and was able to switch my majors and minors around to something that would work. I went for a major in general studies: science, with minors in mathematics and UAS. Once I did that it only took me three semesters to graduate and they were some of the most rewarding classes I ever took.
      I graduated this last spring, and I am now working as a maintenance technician for a global drone delivery company making decent money. And honestly I love my job. It may not be a perfect dream, but its a job that I can enjoy, and that's what matters to me.
      I guess the one piece of advice I feel good about giving you is this: Play to your strengths. I've found that if your doing something your good at, even if it's not your biggest passion, you usually tend to enjoy doing it. At the end of he day we all want to be happy, and that is one of the better ways to go about it.
      Sorry for the long rant, but I wish someone had told me all of this years ago, and I hope it can somewhat help you. Your making one of the most pivotal decisions in your life so take your time and think things through. And if you have any questions I'd be happy to answer them the best that I can. Good luck, and I wish you the best.

  • @HALO-2304
    @HALO-2304 4 года назад +48

    In my daily life, I'm the CAD guy at an automotive parts supplier. However, in my spare time, I've been designing and making gun accessories using CAD and my 3D printer. Things like iron sights, optics risers, etc.
    Why?
    1) Because I can and I enjoy it.
    2) For some parts, nobody else is making them.
    3) The parts already on the market are more expensive I want to pay for something that might not fit well in my application.

    • @Bakotcha
      @Bakotcha 4 года назад +5

      Rule number one: "Enjoy it"

    • @edwhatshisname3562
      @edwhatshisname3562 4 года назад +1

      Do you by chance make iron sights where the front post is in the form of a tiny hand making a middle finger and the rear aperture is a tiny hand making the "ok" sign? I know I've seen that around somewhere before.

    • @HALO-2304
      @HALO-2304 4 года назад +1

      @@edwhatshisname3562 I have the file, but I've just never got around to printing out a set. My IG page is @project88.3d.

    • @hatman4818
      @hatman4818 4 года назад +3

      Can you make me a picatinny rail accessory? As in, a picatinny rail that attaches to a gun's picatinny rail.
      ... I need it for the tacticool memes.

  • @Khanclansith
    @Khanclansith 4 года назад +96

    Watching at 5:56am...

    • @xMrFuzZyKitteH
      @xMrFuzZyKitteH 4 года назад +5

      same

    • @heyheyhophop
      @heyheyhophop 4 года назад +8

      @@arya31ful Not here in Soviet Russia (ours is 5:45) :)

    • @2Potates
      @2Potates 4 года назад +13

      7:62pm. Something's very wrong here, please send help!

    • @MrOtzelot
      @MrOtzelot 4 года назад +1

      you need to listen to eugene stoner interviews at this point, its like a gospel ^^

    • @muddyhotdog4103
      @muddyhotdog4103 4 года назад +3

      And it's literally 2:23 pm as I write this lol

  • @wildnugget1675
    @wildnugget1675 4 года назад +243

    so you wanna be a gun designer, but your weapons don't fly

    • @unsc2060
      @unsc2060 4 года назад +22

      Then hit us up at IWI? Lol

    • @nimzik6758
      @nimzik6758 4 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/xA-DnUVc3l8/видео.html

    • @thepoliticalgunnut8018
      @thepoliticalgunnut8018 4 года назад +2

      @@unsc2060 You got to pimp my slide

    • @gigilibilly
      @gigilibilly 28 дней назад

      Your mind did tho

  • @blindrifleman5307
    @blindrifleman5307 4 года назад +4

    I literally just finished a machinist training/basic education course last night (blueprint reading, manual lathe/mill, grinding, CNC lathe/mill and a little of of CAM/CAD). Hoping I can leverage that and my RSO cert to get a job at one of the local-ish ranges/gunsmithing shops, but I'll be happy if I get basically any job that'll let me put the stuff I learned in that class to use.
    I actually legitimately love the machining process, there's something about watching a block of raw material slowly take shape into something useful that's just... strangely beautiful. Going back for the next semester just to get access to the machines, have a couple personal projects to work on.

  • @observed00
    @observed00 4 года назад +22

    I'm an industrial designer in the firearms industry. I saw a demand for the parts I was making and started a business. I've been making and selling gun parts for 15 years. I specialize in a few particular guns, and in triggers in general. I have a handful of provisional patents related to triggers.

  • @gregingold3670
    @gregingold3670 4 года назад +2

    That is really solid advice. I am also an car enthusiast and wanted to become a mechanic when I was younger. My father gave me the hard advice of not becoming a mechanic just because I like cars. After fixing cars as a side job, getting stiffed on payment and having no time to pursue my own mechanical projects, I saw exactly what he meant. I still play with cars, but now have a good job where I can afford that hobby (as well as some cool historical firearms on the side). I hope this video has the same impact that my father’s talk had in me where someone will look back and be grateful you gave that advice.

  • @bobrees4363
    @bobrees4363 4 года назад +10

    Definition of a gunsmith: Jack of all trades, master of most.

  • @robbytheremin2443
    @robbytheremin2443 4 года назад +7

    Ian, your timing is practically clairvoyant.
    I retired recently and I’d planned to do exactly what you talked about.
    I’m an electronics engineer that specializes in CNC repairs.
    I own a lathe and two mills, one of those is CNC.
    I want to do custom black rifle work including suppressors and maybe LE machine guns. I have some suppressor and gas system ideas that I haven’t seen on the market I’d like to try.
    I have a friend with an 07-02 FFL to help me jump through the government hoops and get licensed.
    I’ll basically be selling just enough product to support my hobby.
    THANK YOU!

  • @greysmith5846
    @greysmith5846 4 года назад +10

    Hell yes! I'm in high school and I'm taking machining courses already because I love working with the machines!

  • @meadball1
    @meadball1 4 года назад +9

    This is exactly why I became a machinist! I wanted to do gunsmithing but found it was a super narrow field. I make aircraft parts now and am in the process of designing a shotgun!

    • @dontkickmychick6076
      @dontkickmychick6076 3 года назад

      Update on this shotgun?

    • @meadball1
      @meadball1 3 года назад +3

      @@dontkickmychick6076 Still just a concept but I know better now what design objectives I'm trying to achieve. Also been learning how to use a 3D printer and figuring out what kind of lock up mechanism would be best. Currently designing a 3D printed mock up to start figuring out tolerances for everything.

    • @Notformainstream
      @Notformainstream 2 года назад

      @@meadball1 keep us updated

    • @mr.randomperson9900
      @mr.randomperson9900 Год назад +2

      Can we get an update?

    • @meadball1
      @meadball1 Год назад +2

      @@mr.randomperson9900 well so far life has been busy LOL However, I think the way I want the shotgun to function is by using magazines in a manner similar to a P90 in that they sit on top of the shotgun and feed downward into the reciever and then eject downward after firing. It would be using a proprietary steel cupped rimless shotgun round similar to Sig's .270 Fury. (I'm fairly certain it wouldn't sell because of that, unfortunately, but technology has to catch up at some point) The locking mechanism would be a ball bearing locking mechanism similar to the Heym SR30 but in an automatic action. I'm thinking once I have a physical prototype I'll start with a pump action to make sure the lock up works and then convert it to a gas operated system and tinker with that. So that's where I'm at.

  • @rifleman1122
    @rifleman1122 4 года назад +4

    CNC operator is a great job. I listened to so many podcasts waiting for my parts to run.

  • @williameargle8851
    @williameargle8851 4 года назад +3

    I'm going to community college right now for a CNC/manual machining diploma and I'm absolutely loving it, I thought I wanted to get into firearm manufacturing but now I'm not really sure but I still know that I want to continue machining. Your advice in this video is really great thank you for sharing your wisdom

  • @davidbeyers7674
    @davidbeyers7674 4 года назад +2

    That is great advise Ian, the only thing I would add having worked in aerospace engineering for over 20 years is that industrial design, mechanical and material engineers are the foundation of good product design and useability. These are the ones who will create the next generation of firearms and other products by understanding, designing and exploiting new materials and manufacturing techniques. Having a solid understanding of the physics, material properties and dynamics of stress involved in firearms is the path to true innovation and revolutionary products. Not the only way, but a proven way of designing and creating safe, reliable and successful products. Thanks for all the wonderful videos.

  • @squirrelonmapletree
    @squirrelonmapletree 4 года назад +16

    In the current economic climate, the general advice seems to be "get some money first, preferably be rich, and then see if you can do what you want as a hobby."

    • @cheskotokarev
      @cheskotokarev 3 года назад +1

      Really?
      Capitalism is made specifically so that the only people that can effectively pursue their dreams and exercise their rights to the fullest extent are the rich and powerful?
      Wow, what a truly profound and shocking prospect.

  • @FolgoreCZ
    @FolgoreCZ 4 года назад +134

    Everyone: I caught coronavirus on the Shot show.
    Ian: I'm recovering from a cold.

    • @tlshortyshorty5810
      @tlshortyshorty5810 4 года назад +14

      FolgoreCZ Quick, get his blood, he’s immune! Let us send out the Holy Gun Eucharist!

    • @DP-fq7iy
      @DP-fq7iy 4 года назад +14

      “I am growing stronger.”

    • @rhvette
      @rhvette 4 года назад +5

      T L Shorty Shorty He’s still pretreated from the Salmiakki taste test.

    • @VashGames
      @VashGames 4 года назад

      *Looks at videos of Chinese officials wearing PPE and a holster* Beware free flu shots.

    • @ScottKenny1978
      @ScottKenny1978 4 года назад

      Coronavirus is the common cold virus, just an actual deadly strain for the first time in a while.

  • @JamesJesseGTA
    @JamesJesseGTA 4 года назад +31

    Consider the following:
    The first successful aircraft designers and builders got their experience working on bicycles.
    The first aircraft mechanic in aviation history who built the engine needed for the Wright Flyer was just a bicycle mechanic.

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 4 года назад +2

      And those that succesfully improved and circumvent Wright patents are engineers like Glen Curtiss...

  • @knifedance2402
    @knifedance2402 4 года назад +2

    Jesus Christ Ian, I went through an identical sort of transformation just recently at university. Went in as an aero engineer with the same sort of expectations; That I would be actually prototyping aircraft. Upon finding it’s mostly designing tiny fractions of aircraft on computers, that was it for me. Since then, your channel has pretty much singlehandedly into guns. I’ve actually built a few prototypes, and I doubt it’ll go anywhere, but still, the skills are something I imagine I could do all manner of things with. Neat to see that same thing happen to someone as absolutely tragic as it feels in the moment.

  • @baronofhell2277
    @baronofhell2277 4 года назад +77

    When i first red the thumbnail, i red "How to become a gun".

    • @JanTuts
      @JanTuts 4 года назад +7

      Step 1: be the Iron Giant

    • @L1LegoAnimations
      @L1LegoAnimations 4 года назад +1

      @@JanTuts Not gun :)

    • @arturovasquez5612
      @arturovasquez5612 4 года назад +4

      Step 1: join the decepticons
      Step 2: Be Megatron
      Step 3: ???
      Step 4 : profit

    • @theRPGmaster
      @theRPGmaster 4 года назад

      Well, if anyone can do that, it's gun jesus.

  • @thomassutrina7469
    @thomassutrina7469 4 года назад +6

    Great advice. I wanted to design airplanes out of HS, Boy Scout flying troop that owned a Taylor Craft. I got my pilots license in the next two years while in college and graduated with an Aeronautical Engineering degree at the end of the Vietnam war. Zero interview for aerospace companies on campus because none went to any University. When to get a Masters in Mechanical Engineering Degree and in the process talked to one person that said the Aerospace company that hired him had a rule that you had to work for them for a year before they could lay you off. The bottom fell out of the industry so he knew his leaving date within weeks of starting.
    So what did I due. I loved engineering. Worked for Dow Chemical, and then a division of UTC, an aerospace component manufacture for 20 years. Never put one toe on an airplane. Have two dozen patents on components for airplane electrical systems. And can say I have some sweet in the 7J7, advanced technical fighter, and dozens of other airplanes. And also some space components.
    I enjoyed the process of designing new products, doing engineering, and was good at it. Those that were not good at it were all laid off at some point in time. The biggest foot print I have created is not in aerospace, Zip Loc Sandwich Bag film making machine and Free Style Breast Pump. The next on my list is drilling 2 Km into the ice with hot water at the south pole to build a Neutrino Telescope and a Nitric oxide metering device that I packaged and improved.

  • @carcasses5131
    @carcasses5131 4 года назад +9

    Really enjoying these Q&A style videos, Ian.
    Love your work buddy, enjoyable and educational as always

  • @jaredfullmer7043
    @jaredfullmer7043 3 года назад +1

    I’m working for a firearms manufacturer. The company’s design engineer got a bachelor’s in mechanical engineering, got an internship with this firearms company, worked in that position for eight months, and got a job as an engineer. He’s three years in and loves it. Apparently it pays fairly well too because his daughters are doing barrel racing in junior rodeo.
    As for me, I graduated in April with a bachelor’s degree in manufacturing engineering technology and started my engineering internship back in May. The engineering director told me he wouldn’t have a position open for at least a year, so I took a position as a quality tech back in August. Since I’m not liking that and I’ve expressed interest in getting into the machining side of things I was offered an opportunity to switch to being a machine operator this week. Still waiting to hear back from the aerospace company owned by the same guy that owns the firearms company about my application to work as a manufacturing engineer, which they’ve had a lot of people apply for, so I might just take it.

  • @BushWookie666
    @BushWookie666 4 года назад +3

    So true, I have wanted to get into firearms manufacturing for the better part of 10 years now. So, I’m currently in machine tool technology at school (think running manual mills, lathes etc, and basic CNC) and honestly it’s not the most fun thing in the world to sit at a machine, but by learning the skills to make a print and create parts means I can actually design firearms or anything I want for that matter.

  • @herknorth8691
    @herknorth8691 4 года назад +5

    I fell ass-backwards into a machining job years ago that got me trained on the job. I wound up making plumbing parts for about 3 years before leaving to work at a pro-RKBA lobbying organization. They laid me off after about 6 months due to "funding issues" and I went back to machining, this time for a optics/rifle scope manufacturer. I spent about 3.5 years there and got some sweet discounts along the way but really, it was just like machining plumbing parts. When you do that kind of work you get lost in a world of thousandths of an inch and stop really caring what the part you're making is going into.
    I left that job in the firearms industry because I got sick of the long commute. I now live 2 miles from work and can ride my bike there in warmer weather in about 20 minutes. I make just as much as I did in the firearms industry and I now have more free time to spend on shooting. I got back home from Desert Brutality last night and have today off to rest. That would have been harder in my previous job in the firearms industry.
    Find a job that pays well, gives you flexible time off, and that you don't hate. If you have that, it doesn't matter much what you're doing.

  • @Gallo_Tech
    @Gallo_Tech Год назад +1

    Thank you Ian, I always appreciate your videos, new and old. You always supply the helpful information I'm looking for

  • @danmeyer2737
    @danmeyer2737 4 года назад +1

    Great video, I started as a machinist apprentice years ago and transitioned into gunsmithing. Very well explained how the two industries share many aspects.

  • @djvdheide8362
    @djvdheide8362 4 года назад +3

    Great video Ian, I really agree with you! I am almost done with my bachelor degree in mechanical engineering and I would like to work as a designer in the defense industry at some point. I am however aware of that fact that the sort of work I would end up doing at say H&K might be basically the same as the sort of work I would be doing when working for say a car manufacturer. I am also pretty sure only a small section of H&K's engineers determine a firearm's way of functioning. All the other engineers are there to specialize in things like setting up mass production lines, testing, QA, material research etc. It is therefore completely possible to work for a firearms manufacturer and not even know what a bolt is, or how a simple open bolt SMG works. Because when you isolate the physics from their real world application it is all the same. The dynamics calculations behind a spring - damping system in a car's suspension will be similar to the calculations you need to do when determining the right bolt weight and spring strength for a SMG. So it is not the guns that you need to like, you need to like physics; engineering etc.

  • @glennlucas9407
    @glennlucas9407 4 года назад +4

    I know the feeling. I'd love to mess with firearms all day. I build power lines and end up buying and collecting firearms. Love what you do Ian keep up the great work

  • @pablorambo123
    @pablorambo123 4 года назад +1

    I'm a gun designer in the UK. I studied electronic and electrical engineering and went on to have various unrelated jobs. As soon as I left university I started teaching myself CAD design and wanted to start my own company manufacturing paintball guns (it was a big hobby of mine). I saved up money and ended up manufacturing a paintball accessory made using injection moulding in China. It tanked. I then joined the Navy as a Weapons Engineering Officer, thinking I would maybe end up in weapons design/manufacture. That was maybe possible 15 years down the line if you brown nosed the right people and got super lucky. I decided to leave and finally get a job in the firearms industry. I put my notice in and went to a shooting show. I begged everyone for a job and finally found one.
    In the 2 years I've been working I've managed to design a variety of things including air guns, silencers, shotguns and pistols. Some have been manufactured and sold, others are in the pipeline.
    My advice for anyone wanting to get into gun design is like Ian said, do it as a hobby first. Self learn CAD then sit at home and start drawing. Whether its a new foregrip or a full auto pistol, if you get that model made you can start thinking about manufacturing. Look at how you would make the parts, what machines you need, how to improve on the design. Look at how you would assemble it, what it would sell for after distribution/taxes/transport, is there even a market for it? Learn these things and you can approach any company with confidence and more than likely they will be impressed with what you accomplished on your own.
    It takes time, dedication and luck, but it is possible.
    p.s the pay is low compared to other engineering jobs (in the UK at least)

  • @jonathangarcie7121
    @jonathangarcie7121 4 года назад +2

    I'm going into aero-space engineering and was wondering about this my self. This video was very insightful, thank you!

  • @user-ok9lm3fj5l
    @user-ok9lm3fj5l 4 года назад +3

    Although I was not considering such at all, this video gave me a good life lesson. I don't have to be so obsessed to have what I like as my job. I can do what I am good at to earn my income, and do what I like as a hobby. That is not a compromise, that is more freeing pressure off on doing what I like, making it more enjoyable.

  • @RobinP556
    @RobinP556 4 года назад +7

    I’m a gunsmith and agree absolutely. However, I would add one thing and that’s to look at the various NRA summer classes that you’re interested in and if possible take those. They are very specialized, for example you might take a specific class on precision bolt action riffles. This way you’ll get everything that Ian has mentioned as well as learning from some of the best in short, 1-2 week classes and you won’t be Re-inventing the wheel. .

  • @jackvernian7779
    @jackvernian7779 4 года назад +2

    Becoming good at "doing calculus" for either airfoils or gun parts can put you head and shoulders ahead when it comes down to gun or airplane design, since you can actually tell if it's a dysmal failure or a worthwhile idea from the engineering standpoint. You can also predict in advance how many rounds will it last or what potential problems it might have. But no, there's no "I want to design stuff" ticket here, but things you learn are extremely useful for that angle.
    I also fully agree with "start with machining, continue with specialization"

  • @tastethesoup
    @tastethesoup 4 года назад +1

    This was super helpful and honestly pretty relevant to me. I wanted to be a firearm designer at some point (though I've pretty much wanted to be everything at some point) and I went to college for mechanical engineering, but eventually sort of decided that I want to be an aerospace engineer with the idea of designing planes and possibly even spacecraft just like you said. I'm sure I could always pick up gun design as a hobby especially seeing how much 3D printing technology has come in the past decade, maybe I can even do it from my home! Anyways, thanks again, I love all your videos and you often give amazing advice, would love to become a patreon supporter in the future :3

  • @Zoco101
    @Zoco101 4 года назад +5

    Thanks for this informative video. It might save a lot of people from going off in the wrong direction. You got my thumbs up. I guess this approach applies to quite a few of the more interesting and esoteric careers.

  • @theblekedet6467
    @theblekedet6467 4 года назад +3

    I love this new, advisory/informative format!

  • @Redmenace96
    @Redmenace96 4 года назад

    Good life advice + shout out to Mike Rowe = Pure Gold
    Thank you, Gun Jesus.

  • @robertl6770
    @robertl6770 Год назад +1

    A fair understanding of fluid thermodynamics is nice too.

  • @thearisen7301
    @thearisen7301 4 года назад +4

    Writer questions!
    - What advice would you give a writer about real life guns?
    - What advice would you give when creating fictional guns?
    - What advice would you give about using guns? Both on an individual level and for army use
    Hopefully you see this Ian as I'm currently world building for a fantasy story and I'd love to be able to incorporate your advice.

    • @domino4843
      @domino4843 2 года назад +2

      - Boom boom pow pow
      - Make them go boom boom pow pow
      - More boom boom pow pow = More fun (this applies to both)
      I hope my stellar insight into the subject has enlightened you.
      Sincerely,
      Not Ian

  • @karm65
    @karm65 4 года назад +59

    Want to design your own guns? Study Mechanical Engineering, chemistry specializing in metallurgy, physics. calculus, industrial machining processes. graphic arts.....

    • @darkally1235
      @darkally1235 4 года назад +30

      Don't forget patent law and market analysis

    • @hardmcshaft5665
      @hardmcshaft5665 4 года назад +11

      Dont forget the online learning centre known as forgotten weapons lol. So much in depth knowlege on the evolution of firearms thank you Ian

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack 4 года назад

      ...or...social work?

    • @bravo0105
      @bravo0105 4 года назад +2

      Most important of all, operate small arms: handle, observe operation, shoot, clean/disassemble, study individual parts, repair, and modify when appropriate.
      Start off modestly as a hobbyist and proceed from there.

    • @kovona
      @kovona 4 года назад +3

      "chemistry specializing in metallurgy" - we call it Material Science.

  • @alangliniak9514
    @alangliniak9514 4 года назад

    From someone typing this from a desk at a major firearms manufacturer, Ian is spot on.

  • @soonersmith4179
    @soonersmith4179 4 года назад +1

    I started in College majoring in Aerospace engineering thinking like you did. After 2 years I got an summer internship and learned i will spend the rest of my life in a cubicle if I stay on this course. It was so boring but I did learn SolidWorks!

  • @someguy2741
    @someguy2741 4 года назад +7

    I heard it this way a long time ago. Make a living at your second favourite thing and make first favourite your hobby.

  • @KaletheQuick
    @KaletheQuick 4 года назад +161

    Sad. The bar to entry is "Be rich and do it as a hobby"
    Oof.

    • @TheFishE77Official
      @TheFishE77Official 4 года назад +35

      Meh, you could say that about literally anything though, racing, gun building, aviation, sport fishing, anything

    • @KaletheQuick
      @KaletheQuick 4 года назад +30

      @@TheFishE77Official But you know what you don't need to be rich for?
      Game night.
      Get over here boys! We are rolling up some characters!

    • @colemanmoore9871
      @colemanmoore9871 4 года назад +5

      ​@@KaletheQuick Now I spend too much on dice and minis that I don't even need!

    • @machinist7230
      @machinist7230 4 года назад +7

      Manufacturing in general is dollar intensive - cheapest optioni can think of these days for a "real" machining center is a used Fadal, starting at 5 grand for a machine more than 20 years old. The new Hurcos i ran at work? Upwards of over a qurter million each. And thats before workholding and toolholding, with vises running from 600 bucks to over 2 grand, and toolholders stating at 100 bucks a pop, and you might need 30 of them per machine.

    • @TheStraycat74
      @TheStraycat74 4 года назад +6

      Hobby I can do. the rich part has been eluding me my entire life...

  • @Anion1987
    @Anion1987 4 года назад +1

    I work in the unemployment ministry in Austria and I wish there were more honest videos with hands-on advice about certain professions like this! Thank you Ian and greetings from Austria (sorry for my english)

  • @MyDarkMe
    @MyDarkMe 4 года назад +1

    The problem is, many people dont know how product design and/or engineering works.
    They think its like "oh I have this great idea and the company is gonna pay me for that to develop it into a gun"
    Buts thats nowhere near to how these processes actually work. Only top high level engineers, have a privilege to be creative.
    Like you already mentioned, 99% of engineers only do calculations or models of stuff somebody else told them in which specific way they should be done.
    BTW, smiled a little when you basicly summed up not only your CV, but also mine :)

  • @robgreene1776
    @robgreene1776 4 года назад +11

    Pursue a Mechanical Engineering Degree, in addition to any hands on skill set.

  • @gabbycross32
    @gabbycross32 4 года назад +116

    "Go to machining instead"
    How about going Mechanical Engineering?

    • @AverageJoe4063
      @AverageJoe4063 4 года назад +21

      Unfortunately most things are designed and not engineered and most engineers are relegated to just one or a few parts and focus mainly on making them cheaper.

    • @gabbycross32
      @gabbycross32 4 года назад +14

      @@MhDaMaster As someone who has worked some time in a fabrication shop, I can attest to this. Not everything has to be complicated.

    • @flare9757
      @flare9757 4 года назад +14

      Joshua Gibson A good example of this was the Tiger and Panther tanks. Were they good on paper? Yes. Did they work well? They had issues with the transmission, engines, and accessing the suspension.

    • @johnstacy7902
      @johnstacy7902 4 года назад +21

      Stoner, Browning, Garand, Kalisnikov were all toolmakers.

    • @robosoldier11
      @robosoldier11 4 года назад +2

      Joshua Gibson looking back on Ian’s video on the British besal LMG. I defiantly can recognize that concept coming into play. In terms of streamlining something without sacrificing its capability and practicality too much.

  • @bluegill5802
    @bluegill5802 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for making this, it probably helped a lot of people

  • @phoenix55755
    @phoenix55755 4 года назад +2

    I am learning gunsmithing because I want to repair guns. Not necessarily make parts, but repair guns. Maybe make custom guns. It is an online course. I will start out as a hobby. I am going to school for autobody for main job.

    • @phoenix55755
      @phoenix55755 4 года назад

      @Zachary Peterson no, Penn Foster. Couldn't afford SDI, otherwise I would have. Ultimately, I want to have my own shop.

  • @catfish552
    @catfish552 4 года назад +14

    "Much more of the time, someone invests all of their savings and all of their time, and a tremendous amount of their soul into a project..."
    ...and then a couple decades later it shows up on this channel. :P

  • @Zoco101
    @Zoco101 4 года назад +11

    What about gun smithing - I mean just repairing/modifying firearms. Does it come under the same umbrella?

    • @dposcuro
      @dposcuro 4 года назад +4

      Well, look at the market for it today. How many people are out there, that you would actually call "Gunsmiths"?
      Due to the market saturation of the AR-15, the commonality of parts, etc? There isn't much need for any actual gunsmiths.
      I am not saying there aren't any, but I am saying there are not many anymore. Because for the most part, if a part breaks in a modern firearm, you just buy a replacement part, do a field strip, replace broken part, bam. Done. Modifying? Drift some pins, and attaching a different muzzle device is easy enough, a 10 year old could do it.
      Okay, enough shitting on your dream, because there is a bit of light in there:
      Go to college, do as Ian suggested, get some experience with machining, welding, etc. This is the backbone of what you will need. Then? Find a normal job using those skills to gain experience in using the machines, mastering your tig welding, etc. While doing that? Talk to people in the industry. Get in contact with reputable gunsmiths, talk to them, learn from them if they are willing to talk to you. If you can? Ask if they are taking any apprentices. Build skills, build connections, and find someone willing to take you under their wing. You are going to want to learn from someone good, who has been doing gunsmithing for years (remember to *learn from them* )
      Why do I consider this important? Because Gunsmithing is such a niche market now, it is generally done by a handful of people who have already been doing it for decades. Someone who digs up broken MG34, or ZB27, isn't going to want to trust some unknown person with their prize. No one wants to entrust their 1800s revolver with a broken hammer to some guy who has only been in the gunsmithing trade for 3 years.
      To do actual gunsmithing, you are looking at entering a small, and kind of shrinking market. You are looking to enter a "luxury" market, where you are working on older firearms that no longer have parts available, but that firearm means enough to the owner, to pay YOU the same amount as a new gun, just to fix it.
      Also realize, you will be spending a lot of your spare time, scavenging for parts which goes back to building connections in the industry, but also carries on with building connections with collectors, with random 88 year old Joe, who has a beaten down 1799 North & Cheney, plus two hammer springs his grand pappy salvaged back in 1924.

    • @Zoco101
      @Zoco101 4 года назад

      @@dposcuroVery kind of you, I'm sure. No, I wouldn't have time (enough years left) for all that. But it was interesting reading, all the same. Didn't realise you know old Joe...

    • @henrikhans467
      @henrikhans467 4 года назад

      @@dposcuro I see what you mean, but I also noticed one thing. If I recall correctly there was a study done on how often Americans clean guns. For the most part not enough (myself to some extent). So while not a true gunsmith in your definition one could start cleaning and providing a service for the more modern firearms freeing up their time. My observations anyways.

  • @1248dl
    @1248dl 4 года назад

    Very good advice. As an old guy who's been and out of the gun and gunsmithing businesses for about 50 years, really good advice.

  • @breadman32398
    @breadman32398 4 года назад +2

    I'm actually going along this route right now. I just turned down an interview with Ruger for an internship because I'd already taken a position as a manufacturing ops intern at a Raytheon company. I plan on applying for full time engineering openings at firearms companies when I graduate next year. Meanwhile I've been running a small gun related business on the side for the past 3 years where I can pursue my own ideas.

  • @LogicalQ
    @LogicalQ 4 года назад +14

    As someone who followed the adage “Do something you enjoy, and you will never work a day in your life.” I can say that this is some of the most universal advice anyone can receive.
    I pursued a passion of mine only to realize that, for as much as I enjoy it, relying on it for income inflicts a soul sucking financial hardship that crushes any amount of enjoyment you get from it.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 4 года назад +4

    How did you become interested in dealing with historical guns?

  • @fetishartist137
    @fetishartist137 4 года назад

    A great eye opener for me in the 80's, with such wild and crazy guns on the market like the Calico, Viking SMG, Mossberg Bullpup shotgun, Street Sweeper, AMT Automag, etc., was reading Guns and Ammo and seeing how many gun companies were going bankrupt or were in financial distress. Keep in mind, this is before assault rifle bans, and after much of the 1968 Gun Control Act had been repealed. In High School, I was writing a paper addressing gun control, and was shocked how few people were employed in the business. Some shops consisted of a single craftsman. I agree with Ian, and there's a lot you can channel machinist skills into.

  • @homegunsmithunger598
    @homegunsmithunger598 4 года назад

    I have invested a lot of money into my OpenTop Project for the 10/22 and approximately thousand hours within the last 2 1/2 years to make it as good as possible, and I am just a few months before mass production. It will take another 2-3 years to see if this will really work out commercially or not, so Ian is 100% right. Reducing the "real" work and go full risk on something like this would be just stupid.
    The really positive thing is the ridiculous amount of new skills and contacts you get because of a commercial project, even if it doesn't work out commercially. You also start to think completely different, which brings your future designs to a better level right from the beginning. My next project will be a fun project for sure, because the main advantage of hobbyists is freedom, they can build whatever they want, as innovative as they want, which is something that manufacturers can't do.

  • @shivashishupadhyay7473
    @shivashishupadhyay7473 4 года назад +5

    Well i think you should have emotions for guns ....
    Thanks ian for information
    Lov from INDIA

  • @christopherdolan7330
    @christopherdolan7330 4 года назад +3

    "How to have a hobby"

  • @BernGrylls
    @BernGrylls 4 года назад

    I am graduating, i love guns, and i feel blessed by Ian. Ty Ian

  • @donaldasayers
    @donaldasayers 4 года назад

    I think Ian's analysis is spot on and applies to becoming a designer of almost anything. Where we are failing in the UK (One of the ways we are failing... don't ask.) is that degrees that should be practical and even school subjects that should be practical are now completely theoretical done on paper or on the PC. We simply do not have the maker community or even maker mentality that the US seems to have.

  • @alexis1052
    @alexis1052 4 года назад +4

    Thanks a lot Ian for this video ! I'm 16 yo, I think i'm gonna to go to an industrial design school, and then I will contact western Europe gun companies (cause i'm french)

  • @user-xq5og9lt8p
    @user-xq5og9lt8p 4 года назад +9

    "if an economy takes a downturn and you lose your job"
    Ehm... I'd think guns will be in even higher demand in that case

    • @DeepCFisher
      @DeepCFisher 4 года назад +2

      Thats if the economy collapses

  • @Oyez10
    @Oyez10 3 года назад +1

    I am just finishing up this journey. albeit with precharged pneumatic air guns which are insanely more complicated than firearms due to inherent design requirements and low available energies for self cycling, but present all of the traditional firearms design issues. After 10 years, multiple patents, thousands of hours worked and gobs of money invested, I'm finally there. I now own a production cnc shop and i knew nothing of the business when i started working on my "side project". Everything I do now was born of the urge to create weaponry. If you have determination and unshakable work ethics anything is possible....you may not have any friends and be broke when you're done though lol. -Will

  • @TIGER-ty2yl
    @TIGER-ty2yl Месяц назад

    "sit down until that feeling goes away" (me sitting for 15/16 years, still didn't go away)

  • @freekshow0011
    @freekshow0011 4 года назад

    I worked as a welder/fabricator for 17 years and came up with some really cool ideas. I ended up quitting my job and went to night classes to learn autocad so i could draw out my ideas. After that i went on to college and am currently in mechanical engineering learning to actually build my designs. My plan is to try and do an interneship at colt canada and actually learn to build ar's then go out on my own and start my own business

  • @dannya8300
    @dannya8300 4 года назад +1

    wow, I didn't know you started out as an aeronautical engineering student! That's actually pretty similar to my story; I started my freshman year of university as an aero major, but quickly switched to mechanical engineering when I found much more variety and positions available for it. Now, I'm having a blast working at Nerf as a co-op and I couldn't be happier! While nerf is very different than proper gun manufacturing, there is still very similar problems to solve between both of them!

  • @silverjohn6037
    @silverjohn6037 4 года назад

    A friend of my mother's once told me a story about his nephew who works as a machinist. The shop he worked for had a mining company come to them with a broken part for an old machine that would cost them over a million dollars to replace. The original manufacturer was out of business so no more spare parts and they'd already tried some other machine shops who'd said they couldn't make the part because of the odd shape even when they used the computer guided tools that are standard in machine shops these days. The nephew managed to make the part but to do it he had to actually design and make a new set of tool bits for the machine just to make that part!
    If you think that you're at that level of practical engineering gun design would be an option. Either way make sure you study math and some basic computer coding as the nephew never actually touched the part, he just programmed the computer with the designs for the machine to make.

  • @staguar
    @staguar 4 года назад +1

    I ran a CNC machine for four years. It was a great job for me because I had plenty of time to read books while the machine did all the work for me.

  • @zul448
    @zul448 4 года назад

    As someone who spent many years working in the machine shop of a medical device company, this advice is SPOT ON. So many machinists and mechanical engineers start out with wild dreams about being a designer of guns, or cars, or aircraft, etc. only to realize that machining and manufacturing is all sort of same-y, and trying to get into industry X or company Y is pretty much a waste of time. Get the skills, then find the job that pays the best, has a good culture and benefits, and is located where you want to live. Then pursue those passionate interests in your free time. You will find it far less frustrating, because your "ideal" won't keep getting derailed by never getting that *perfect* job at that *perfect* company. And being a machinist/engineer can be rewarding all on its own, even at someplace you never would have thought you'd work at, like a place that makes orthopedic bone screws!

  • @SeidenFisk
    @SeidenFisk 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for this video. Your channel is what got me into firearms design in the first place :)

  • @j.a.steiger7201
    @j.a.steiger7201 4 года назад +1

    Good advice. I spent a year at TSJC and decided that wasn't what I wanted. Machining classes are more useful. Now I work for an ammuniton manufacturer and do the gun building/assembling as a hobby.

  • @emersonb5764
    @emersonb5764 4 года назад +2

    I can vouch that you can enjoy it more if you do it as a hobby. One sure way to take something you love and turn it into something you hate is to make it your full time job for 5+ years.

  • @Saltpork305
    @Saltpork305 4 года назад

    One of the other options is if you fit that 'machinist' mindset and want college is manufacturing engineer. It's the people who build the machines and processes that create stuff.
    An easy example: AK flats are stamped metal that go through lots of shaping processes. The manufacturing engineer is the person who plans out the stamping machine dies, flow process on the factory floor and works with QA to verify the parts are coming out correct.

  • @2literbottleofsprite78
    @2literbottleofsprite78 3 года назад +1

    Thank I'm just now going into high school and this helped

  • @joshy7759
    @joshy7759 4 года назад

    My brother and I are working on machining training right now, don't know about him but this channel was one of my inspirations, thanks much sir!!!

  • @EthanVandal
    @EthanVandal 3 года назад +1

    If you have a CNC machine and a lathe, and you like to learn from failure, and you'e a certified genius with free time. Design, build, test, rinse, repeat.

  • @tacobox123
    @tacobox123 4 года назад +1

    The best way to start gun making or gun design is to learn blacksmithing. It is a lot cheaper to start with due to you only needing to make a forge and an anvil. After a few months of work I was able to forge out most of the parts for colt single action army revolver. Ian made a good point it was this career is heavily based on ones fabrication skills.
    Think of it this way i understand the math behind how springs work but if I cannot make a spring to the correct specification; that spring would be useless.

  • @CalebWayneMcCready
    @CalebWayneMcCready 4 года назад

    This is why I went for two years to gunsmithing school and currently in CNC school. I want to do it all.

  • @davidrahn9903
    @davidrahn9903 4 года назад

    As a machinist, specifically a custom fixture and jig maker, who now works at a machine shop that does firearms work. I can totally agree with this advice. I went to school to be a machinist because I love manufacturing and working hands-on with parts. Now I get to enjoy making things that are used to make gun parts. But as was said in the video, if something happens to the firearms industry in America I'm still going to be OK because I'm a good machinist.

  • @miguelburgueno4891
    @miguelburgueno4891 4 года назад +1

    I´m 60 y.o., and spent almost all my "useful life" doing some very loved for me, I was lucky... ...and took the guns as a hobby, as you said. Excellent advise, I agree completely. Many thanks, dear Friend..!

  • @bitfreakazoid
    @bitfreakazoid 4 года назад +1

    I'm really glad to see him mention Mike Rowe. :)