Thanks for the feedback / advice. I put a call into the ATF Houston TX office and was unable to reach anyone. I am looking to verify that I do not need a separate building designation to distinguish my residence from my shop which are all at the same 911 address. For those with rural setups with a separate shop, do you know if any such requirement exists? If not I will move ahead with my LLC.
I need to back up and realize that the original thrust of the thread was about getting a lathe....
I think it must be noted that getting licensed and doing work for other people does change the tenor of the thread.
I just went back and did a search "alinwa FFL" and it refreshed me to some of the questions I asked here on this forum a few years back, here's one.
http://benchrest.com/showthread.php?73673-BATFE-rules-re-mfg
I've been an 07 for a few years now.
I'm no expert, and rules do change, and I do this to make my hobby legitimate. And when I have questions re legality as regards FEDERAL licensing I now call "my" ATF contact. He's been very helpful.
By my FFL requirements I can "do business" anywhere on my property...... period.
"My property" is property line to property line..... I've done transfers on the kitchen table and on the tailgate of a pickup truck. "My property" also includes a table at a gunshow or my camping trailer alongside the sparkling trout brook.... although I've never exercised this right. But there is a line for it on the new 4473
Only thing I require as far as on my property is a place to not get rained on and also to be able to set the paperwork down and step off into a private place, out of earshot of the client to call the FBI for their background check.....and not have the wind blow it away....
I just mainly do it indoors, in a room set up for that purpose.
I will offer this "advice". TIFWIW and understand that I'm a button-pushin' POKE-the-bear and BUST-the-winder-to-get-in kinda' guy. And I DO NOT fear "the government"....... (I also am a law-abiding citizen with a completely clean record. I'm an open book.) ..... but In My Opinion it's a battle worth fighting to simply
not let the FBI push you around, or, more specifically not let them push you off. They are a LAZY bunch down there at NICS. If they hit the slightest hiccup they tend to (or I should say HAVE TENDED TO in the past??? They seem to be improving???) say "there's a hold, something that must be looked into, we'll get back to you" or a "deny" or and you don't get your permission. When I first got my FFL I had several cases where friends of mine got held up on a purchase for days.... I've heard of it taking weeks... For me it was a one day hold, one time and I got sick of it. firearm sales/transfers are a pita......I started saying "well, kick me on up the food chain, I'll wait"
I've learned to tell the applicant "this could be 10 minutes or an hour"
Keep a pen handy and write down EVERYTHING, names, NTN number but mainly just politely get the person's name and # (they all have a number) so that you can tell superiors to whom you spoke. Sooner or later you will get far enough up the line to get an answer in my experience. Learn to repeat their answer back to them with the NTN or any other number. The only two things most of these people value is "face" and their job. I've politely shuffled up the line 4 levels before, set on the phone for 40 minutes. And got the all clear in the end....
If you let go that phone it might be a long process... and paperwork....VAF, UPIN, back and forth emails. I don't know, I've never let it go there.
Now the FBI, wheewwwwwieeee...... they ARE NOT professional nor courteous!!! They are bigoted dysfunctional trailer trash......
YUP, I said that on the innernet out there in fronta' God and ever'body.
I feel that there are certain people at the FBI who are blatantly anti 2A and they will sic an ATF agent on you at the drop of a hat. ATF and FBI are completely disconnected agencies but the FBI can "authorize" or worse yet "recommend" a visit from the ATF basically on a whim.
I did have an over-zealous FBI group try fish me a while back over a handgun...... basically if they call and you let them, they can send an ATF agent over to look through your books and copy everything whether there's probable cause or not. So I just told them "no." (I WAS NOT involved in any way with the handgun they were fishing for)
While I feel the FBI is getting big-headed, I sincerely feel that the ATF is trying hard to be good people.
BUT, having a lathe and doing machine work is very different that using the lathe as a business enterprise, in the firearms industry.
I started doing gun work back when it was ATF, and the thought of any American owning a suppressor was a distant fantasy. Then I worked with them as BATF and as BATFE. After that experience I decided I'd never deal with those guys again, it's cheaper/better/safer to just pay others to stay on top of their equipment and the rules. But times do change....Due entirely to good people doing good things we're now back to ATF, and the old "presumption of guilt just because you have a threaded muzzle" is a memory.