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May 12th, 2011, 19:26 | #1 |
how long do you keep a gun?
Hey docs just wondering, how long do you keep a gun for a client while waiting on parts? If they have ordered them do you usually keep it around?
Right now I am dealing with the situation that someone has left a gun with me for >8 months waiting on parts. I finally have the parts I need and now I am missing parts to put it back together, I had it separate but it kept getting moved... Have another one that I have asked to get a battery for me to see if the issue is his battery... that was March 28th. Beginning to feel like a storage house. |
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May 12th, 2011, 19:42 | #2 |
Crackers
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I belive tyson has a 6 month waiting period in which you have time to pick up your gun and pay, if not he puts it up for sale
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May 12th, 2011, 19:52 | #3 | |
Quote:
Part of being a gun doc is that you should allot yourself somewhere to put your projects as you work on them and keep them organized. |
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May 12th, 2011, 19:53 | #4 |
So the first one is your fault cause you misplaced parts, and the second one is also your fault because you don't have mulitple batteries to test with (which you should if you're calling yourself a "gundoc").
I don't see how it's the "client's" fault. |
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May 12th, 2011, 19:54 | #5 |
2 months unless something else was agreed upon.
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May 12th, 2011, 20:02 | #6 | |
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I had all his parts put in a safe spot. But anything with small parts after 8 months is bound to lose a few things. All his parts were in a zip loc bag. They got taken out to fix the gun when we found another broken part, so back in the went... so yah its been in and out a few times. And I don't call my self a gun doc, I am just a guy that fixes a few guns for his team mates. |
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May 12th, 2011, 20:15 | #7 |
aka coachster
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May 12th, 2011, 20:23 | #8 |
Joeyaglr444
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You wouldn't accept that if someone was working on your gun.
__________________
It's not about the guy who doesn't call his hit. It's about the pants you're wearing and the pants you're team mate is wearing, Is it real multi cam or is it Chinese repro multi cam? I don't know but in the end it's still multicam. |
May 12th, 2011, 20:38 | #9 |
May 12th, 2011, 21:27 | #10 | |
Tys
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Quote:
That's when I was "retiring" from public gun doc work. Any given week I regularly had ~7-12 AEGs at my place, and GBBs, and batts/mags/optics...none of which counted my own. I once had as many as 22 AEGs queued up to go (when I dared to take Dec off one year to do *shock* family stuff). I could literally open a cabinet and have AEGs spill out. Not to mention the space that the cases, bags, etc..took up. When I retired from the public gun doc scene I gave guys PMs, phone calls, e-mails, etc...to come and get their stuff that was finished. After 3 months of calling/waiting/calling/waiting/calling....I gave final noticed. That worked...everyone got their stuff the f*ck out of my house (except for a teammate who was probably hiding stuff from his fiancee ). I gave away three big rubbermaid bins of parts/pieces/accessories to 3 buddies....they gathered around my basement and divied up everything. Must have been $$$ worth of things. To OP: If you've lost something (I had an AK butt plate go missing once...turned out my daughter took it to add to the play kitchen...found it well after I had bought a replacement)....you've got to make good on it. Buy replacement parts out of pocket. Plain and simple. If you've agreed to take on something...you're stuck doing it. If you're not willing to do it...give it back and be prepared for whatever bridge burning that may cause. In the end...a stern heads-up is sometimes all that is needed to get someone to get their ass in gear. Last edited by m102404; May 12th, 2011 at 21:30.. |
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May 12th, 2011, 22:37 | #11 |
I totally agree that I will be replacing the part. my issue is the screws really... trying to remember what bloody screw goes where.
I started this thread just as a curious question of how long you guys usually have stuff in your shop. I live in a 1100 SQ/ft 2 bedroom apartment, one bedroom is well.. a bedroom, the other is my shop/office.... Its packed with RC gear Airsoft stuff and I also work from home so its my work station, it gets a little cramped when people start leaving things here for months on end. And its not like I am a guy that looses things easily, I had my VSR apart for a few months before I finally found a very hard part to find to fix it, went back together no issues.... |
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May 12th, 2011, 23:32 | #12 | |
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May 13th, 2011, 00:15 | #13 |
Longest I had a gun was over a year... that is when I decided I wanted a policy about that.
I usually keep it 6 months after the work is completed. I tell people before hand and call them when the gun is ready and once a month. The last call is to tell them that the gun is up for sale to cover labor and parts put into his rifle. It never happened yet, but if it does, I would keep part of the money to cover for labor and parts, and send the rest to the owner. Until the parts arrive, it's normal to keep the rifle. And losing a part is my responsibility. It never happened yet but that's part of the deal. |
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May 13th, 2011, 04:33 | #14 |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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Amos, how long have I had Jason's PKM? lol
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