Who here is running hobby metal shops? I am building out my shop of welders, knee mills and CNC plasma. To justify more and to keep using this equipment, I want to know if anybody has been successful is taking on side work?
Only so much work I can do for myself.
I'd like to think I'm much more of a hobbyist shop than most others I know - I say this because it must be emphasized that I had zero experience with welding, zero experience with CAD, and zero experience with metal fabrication as a whole.
I had always wanted to get into metal working as a hobby ever since I had a new floor pan replaced in my '77 Trans Am by someone else (welded). This was only in 2011.
Anyway I didn't get into metal working at all until I went to school for welding, right after retiring in 2021. It was a whole 10 month long course vs one of those learn-overnight type deals. I won't sidetrack and talk about that.
While at school, I bought myself a welder and started doing my own side projects. That turned to people asking me to fix this, or make that. What started out as a cheap TIG and MIG welder and a free bandsaw turned out to being certified for various processes, and running a CNC plasma table and CNC press brake in my home garage.
I'm often on CAD, as recent as last night, as I'm making a bolt-together assembly for someone I collaborate with quite a bit. I've made lots of money doing so, even though I charge a
hobbyist rate because really the end goal was to be able to do/make what I want and need, and offer work to the little guy (me) in the position I was some 5 years ago.
I've even done work for members here, just cause they've seen my posts and saw what I can do.
The potential to have a full blown hobbyist metal shop is there, even if you lack the capital investment like I did since I'm disabled. If you're willing to push your skillset to the next level each time a request comes in, the money will come and it'll fund the next tool and so forth.
