I take none of the legal considerations into account when I do an action job--I don't carry a gun. All I'm doing is making the gun more shootable, simply putting the action into a condition which used to be prevalent from the factory prior to slipshod cost-cutting manufacturing techniques. I'm no great shakes when it comes to doing things, but I've done 1911's, S&W K,L,&N's, Ruger Redhawks and Blackhawks, probably over thirty guns and have yet to get one wrong, so that must mean I've found it easier to get it right than wrong. Maybe I should quit while I'm ahead, eh?
I find the reliance on 'professionals' to be somewhat amusing. Something has managed to instill a mindset into the majority of people in this country that doing almost anything, be it replacing a furnace or smoothing up a revolver's action, is something that's 'best left to the pros.' That's what I alluded to when I said 'few would try.' I've lived the majority of my life in an area where the nearest 'pro' was yourself--you couldn't get anybody to come out and do anything if you tried. Consequently, that imbued most of us with a confidence in our own abilities to handle our own repairs and projects, and from what I've seen, a lot of these 'pros' are amateurs masquerading.
I find the reliance on 'professionals' to be somewhat amusing. Something has managed to instill a mindset into the majority of people in this country that doing almost anything, be it replacing a furnace or smoothing up a revolver's action, is something that's 'best left to the pros.' That's what I alluded to when I said 'few would try.' I've lived the majority of my life in an area where the nearest 'pro' was yourself--you couldn't get anybody to come out and do anything if you tried. Consequently, that imbued most of us with a confidence in our own abilities to handle our own repairs and projects, and from what I've seen, a lot of these 'pros' are amateurs masquerading.