OP

Wow, that was a rough stretch there. Good on you for keeping a positive attitude!
Retro Husky looks sweet, can't wait to see your take on it. What year is that frame?
Interesting seeing the fixtures and setups for the AR-10s. I bought a bunch of mags before our WA mag ban went into effect on the first of this month, so I guess I'll have to build one up one of these days...can't just leave those mags sitting in a box, they might get lonely![]()


Thanks! At the moment just 308 but 6.5 creedmore will be coming soon. Down the road we might offer some more options but at the moment we are very limited on machines and have limited production capacity on these.The 10's look great, congrats on getting them and the CNC's, I'm sure you are stoked. Out of curiosity what all calibers will they be offered in?
JB












































you got the 30-06! there is also 7mm mag, 6.5 PRC, then 300WM.Okay, I'm going to make some really bad guesses, but looks like a 30-06, .270 and kind looks like a .308 but the case is larger than I remember. When will these as well as the Glocks be available online?
JB
Well not the first time I only had 50% on a pop quiz.you got the 30-06! there is also 7mm mag, 6.5 PRC, then 300WM.
Not sure when these will be available. Waiting on some custom BCG parts so we can do testing. If all that stuff is good then really I only need to figure out the magazines but I am sure it will take some time to sort it all out. At the moment I have no date on the Glocks either. Those have just been delay after delay with dealing with ATF, parts suppliers, then just trying to make them function absolutely perfectly. Taking a gun designed to be made out of plastic and making it out of metal is wayy more work then you would think. At the moment they are kind of on the backburner for these new AR10s, we are talking about maybe doing 308 ar15s next like the POF Rouge and the Ruger SFAR.




















Thanks! Haven't really done anything at home. We are currently trying to buy my Wifes Great Grandmas house. She sadly passed away a little over a month ago. She has a nice little house with a about 40 acres. On her land is where my mother and father in laws house is as well and its the land I ride my dirt bike on. So it would be pretty awesome to be able to purchase it. We are pretty confident we will get it but I don't want to get too far ahead of myself if it doesn't work out. We would not get all the land as it is being divided between her kids but the house does have a garage so I would finally have my own garage. My inlaws house would be about 500 feet away though the woods which would work out awesome as that is where my Mill and lathe are out. The goal would be to then build a pole barn between our houses to have our shop in. So trying not to get our hopes up but it would be a pretty awesome scenerio. If it works out then we will get our current house finished once we our moved out. Its very hard to work on a tiny house well living in it. Then either we will rent it out or sell it.Great job figuring out how to make the operations go smoother and quicker, how are the projects at home going?
JB











It definitely does seem like you need to be able to sell your self. I've started keeping track of everything I've done around here to save them money and improve efficiency.I feel for ya man, it is really surprising they didn't let you run with it from the beginning with a price tag of 140k. Out of curiosity now that you've optimized it have you shown your leadership how much you've helped production and crunched the numbers to show they value you've added to the process. Something I've learned is that it isn't necessarily what you do, it is selling that up the chain to sell yourself. I know for me at least I don't like to brag on what I can do, but you really have to in order to get where you want to go.
Really good job for you though, continual optimization is huge, seconds make months, grams make pounds, pennies make millions, keep it up and it'll pay off big time. I look forward to following along and see what you can do when you are on your own.
JB





I am using the probe for checking parts. We have run enough of these and have it dialed in enough that very very rarely do things start coming out of spec. So I have a few specific features that are checked in the machine every so many parts. First and last part in each batch also go through a more in depth check on a CMM.Your programming is quite cool. I'd be using the probe for a lot more checking, the hole diameters and such. Then if the machine has a load meter I'd be doing tool changes based on load instead of part count. As I glance it looks like you have a pretty empty table, I would look at how to machine a group of parts from solid stock and then use the robot hand to move to op 2/20.
Plus I'd be moving away from standard cutters to those specific to the material with longer wear life.
Looks like you are making parts and shortened cycle time, always a good Idea. And having fun doing it!!




