-
Legacy Member
Question regarding certain careers and the term "Gunsmith"
I apologize if my question is not about working on a gun, but only about the definition of "Gunsmith". I'm only asking here because this is the only part of the website that for sure has gunsmiths around.
My question is in regards to the Machine Operators of Gun Factories...and workmen? Rifle Factory Ishapore used the term workmen. Are workmen and Machine Operator the same thing? Hmm...
Anyways, my question is in regards to those. Do they automatically fall under the definition of the word "Gunsmith"? They are the ones who create the guns in the factories, right?
Are they even considered gunsmiths by those who are officially gunsmiths?
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
Last edited by kilopi505; 07-01-2018 at 11:12 AM.
-
-
07-01-2018 11:10 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
The term gunsmith nowadays means more the ones that repair and service firearms, but it changes from country to country. Back in the day a gunsmith would have been someone that probably invented and created firearms. In todays world the people that make firearms in factories are what we call in Australia
fitters and turners (Most gunsmiths are this as well).
So yeah its a bit of a grey and funny coloured area at least from my perspective.
-
-
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
nijalninja
The term gunsmith nowadays means more the ones that repair and service firearms, but it changes from country to country. Back in the day a gunsmith would have been someone that probably invented and created firearms. In todays world the people that make firearms in factories are what we call in
Australia
fitters and turners (Most gunsmiths are this as well).
So yeah its a bit of a grey and funny coloured area at least from my perspective.
So if a gun factory machine operator/fitter and turner says they are a gunsmith, even though they don't have a certification of graduation from some gunsmithing course, it is valid enough that those who graduated from said kinds of courses or apprenticed to a gunsmith can't dispute the claim by the machine operator/fitter and turner?
-
-
Legacy Member
Smith is the original word for working with metal, making all things metal from tools, to blades for kitchen and war, to horseshoes, etc. And repairing them. Nowadays a blacksmith. As a blacksmith couldn't do everything equally well and focused on larger stuff not as finely finished, others specialised from there.
A gun smith is thus a person who makes guns and repairs them, thus a gunsmith. Lock, stock, barrel were the components and mainly still are. If you look at the lock on an early muzzle loader and compare it to a craftsman's lock you will see the specialisation that took place.
Anyone not qualified or able to build a gun from the bare essentials is actually not a gunsmith. Let's exclude making the barrel and receiver from this although they should be able to do this. A machine operator/fitter and turner may become a gunsmith either by experience or further training, or possibly from self learning.
With this in mind, I would broadly describe a machine operator someone who turns out a large number of identical items, a workman similar or combining items into a finished product. Example, the machine operator/workman in a car manufacturing plant isn't a mechanic except if qualified separately.
-
-
Legacy Member
Here in Canada
Gunsmithing is a unlicenced trade. Literally anyone can call themselves a gunsmith. Personally I have done some small level gunsmithing type tasks though various repairs and builds. That being said very few if any actually build a firearm from scratch anymore. Even people like the Weapons Technicians in the Canadian military are just basically parts changers (the AR-15 I built recently I did more on the build than our military trains our military gunsmiths to do).
-
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
kilopi505
So if a gun factory machine operator/fitter and turner says they are a gunsmith, even though they don't have a certification of graduation from some gunsmithing course, it is valid enough that those who graduated from said kinds of courses or apprenticed to a gunsmith can't dispute the claim by the machine operator/fitter and turner?
Thats a tough one. Typically in a legal sense the one with the qualifications is the one with the most authority regardless of their actual capabilities. That is in my country however. You can't tell anyone about anything without having some kind of permit/licence/or certificate. However, if the dispute was about mass manufacturing in a way that the fitter was well versed in and had years experience over the gunsmith then things may change, but if it were a dispute of old parts, old guns, and generally forgotten skills and tools the gunsmith SHOULD have the more authority.
-
-
Legacy Member
I see.
Thank you everyone for your answers! 
This greatly helped me!
-
-
In Australia
we used to call our national service cooks - who all wanted to be called 'chefs' - fitters and turners because they used to fit the food into pots and turn it into 5hit.
-
-
As Dean points out in post #4, Smith relates back to the blacksmith , Gunsmith etc. A time when damascus barrels were the norm........... A Machine operator is just that, he or she operates that machine to produce a component or a certain machiing of that component, workman can relate to anything on the shop floor but would probably be a labourer.
I served an Apprenticeship as a Fitter & Turner not the Chef type as Peter points out, although nothing new on that front in any new modern day Chef, in my current work place the Chefs would be lost without a deep fat fryer, a pair of scissors and a steam oven.......... most things are boiled in the bag or fried, the scissors are just handy for opening the packets.
Anyway back to the Fitter & Turner in me, my trade at the time was you could be given a drawing and told go and make it, as simple as that, a lot different to a operator or Workman.
Todays Gunsmiths are few and far between, the only ones really who can call themselves Gunsmiths in the UK
are the Gumakers we still have who employ Gunsmiths or have had Apprentices through who have served there apprenticeship, even then there will be two sides to the Gunsmith trade as in metal work or wood work........
-
-
Legacy Member
"...Here in Canada
Gunsmithing is a unlicenced trade..." Not exactly but there is no specific training level required to call yourself a gunsmith. A smithy is required to have a Firearms Business licence according to the Firearms Act. Mind you, so is any business doing anything involving firearms. Makes running a firearm related business a bigger pain in the posterior.
"...workmen and Machine Operator the same thing..." Only if the workman actually runs a machine. Neither of 'em are gunsmiths though.
"...Smith relates back to the blacksmith..." The term has nothing to do with Blacksmith's specifically. Paul Revere was a silversmith. There were goldsmiths, sword smiths, arrow smiths, etc., etc.
Spelling and Grammar count!
-