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| The Dead Zone Paintball Related Chat |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Blaster of Muppets | Airsmith question I've been thinking for a while that I would like to become an airsmith. Since I live in Alaska, we have a very distinct lack of talented airsmiths and I would like to help the paintballing community here by fixing people's guns and at the same time helping pay for paintballing. I have experience with all types of mechanical guns from having most gun types in my arsenal at one time or another (gun whoring comes in handy sometimes) and I often fix guns at the field. How should I go about becoming an airsmith?
__________________ "There's nary a beast that can outrun a greased-up scotsman!" - Willie "What makes a VM so charming is that you can chop down small trees with it" - Jaan |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| MCB Member | Take machinist corses. If your in high school, see if they have them, or a local career center has night classes. If your in collage see if you can take them on campus. And if out of collage, See if a local career center has night classes. If nothing is aviable, go to a local machine shop and ask if they do training or know of a place that does. Or you could just become an aprentice and get your journeymans card and get paid to do it.
__________________ ![]() My Feedback Am I really a dealer you ask? Verification Link: http://www.rap4.com/dealers/dealerde...dealers_id=416 |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Blaster of Muppets | Thanks for the advice, but I meant that I wanted to start more of a gun repair shop than actually a custom gun shop. How should I go about starting a buisness to fix guns? What would be the best way to get people to know about such a buisness?
__________________ "There's nary a beast that can outrun a greased-up scotsman!" - Willie "What makes a VM so charming is that you can chop down small trees with it" - Jaan |
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| The Bastich Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Yorktown, Virginia
Posts: 4,059
| Quote:
__________________ Usefull Latin Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt. Translation: When catapults are outlawed, only outlaws will have catapults. Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam. Translation: I have a catapult. Give me all the money, or I will fling an enormous rock at your head. My Feedback Thread | |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Pump Gun Dealer | Spend time at your local field as much as you can, and bring your well stocked tool box. I recommend hanging out by the chrono station. You will find your services in demand there. Soon, you'll get a chance to dive into the guts of almost every popular marker out there. At the field I usually do repairs for paint, and most people are quite willing to let go of 100 rounds for you to get their Autococker shooting well before the next game (which usually means turning the bolt back rightside up). |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| I Am The Admin | Read up on how to tune up guns... Start by specializing in a few of them, etc. Know how to upgrade, add on... etc. How to add eyes and e-frames to autocockers, etc. How to get more efficiency from 12 gram guns... Don't just repair, but market as someone who can tune up too. And as the others said... People will come. Put something in your sigs saying Repair and Tune up Services |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| The Brown Guy! | The local field owner just recently noticed my 'talent' in fixing markers, and hired me to fix markers for him at whatever wage i felt is reasonable, best thing is, i can work on them at home, and the majority of markers around here are spyders (clones) and tippmanns. Talk to your field owner and see if he needs rentals fixed, and tell people that you can (if you can) fix thier markers. You will always find a large number of tard-smiths out there that effed up thier markers.
__________________ ![]() Danger: Reading online forums may cause irreparable damage to your faith in Humanity. Team Rogue Cell #10 Feedback NO'MAAM #16 |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| MCB Member | I get this question at my store all the time. Definitely go to your local field and spend some time there. When people are working on there gun, ask questions and watch what they are doing. This way you can find out what to do (and some times more valuable what NOT to do) If there is a common gun in your area that you don’t know how it works get it and play around with it. This way if you break it you will pay to fix your gun. Read read and read it again. There is alot of info on the net about guns this will help you avoid mistakes. One final thing if it does not go DON’T force it! There is some thing wrong. |
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