Oh, Gosh, Gollleee, and I thought machining speeds and feeds was technical stuff??? How about M08 and M07??
Tell us about your accomplishments.... I'll show you mine if you will show me yours!!
No, speeds and feeds are not technical stuff. Neither is knowing what an M-code coolant command is. The proper application of such things IS technical stuff. This is the difference between the "machine operator" machinists and the guys that actually engineer machining operations.
I have been machining for 25 years. This I consider to be quite irrelevant. Many people spend a lifetime practicing mediocrity and accomplish little. Knowledge and proper application of it is what makes the difference. I started at the bottom and went straight to the top rather quickly. Blazing fast in fact. By the time I was 23 I was the shop foreman and technical leader of about 50 people. At this point I had moved to the top of three different companies, only moving on due to lack of growth potential. Self employment was the next avenue.
At 23 I started my first business with about 200K in equipment. (All financed. No silver spoons here). I gravitated to work that I had little competition with. This would be highly technical, difficult jobs that others couldn't do. 17 years later I own the company I first worked for. Most of my work is in the aerospace and defense arena with components that either sustain life, or take it.
I own five horizontal CNCs with pallet changers and full 4-axis motion. I have three horizontals with full 5-axis controls. Five vertical CNC mills, four CNC turning centers, optical and touch probe CNC CMMs, three seats of Mastercam CADCAM systems. I not only own the equipment but I have intimate knowledge of each of it. I work with designers and engineers on a daily basis. I work with tooling application engineers so I may understand the technology and apply it properly. I work with cutter grinders to improve on cutter geometry, creating better surface finish, tool life, etc. I design toolpaths to most effectively utilize the equipment and tooling.
I don't chose to buy a $600 endmill when you could buy the same size tool for $100 for no reason. I'm currently working on a job that the material alone costs over 10K each! You don't just crank up the RPM and "hope for a good outcome". You must know what is going to happen before it happens. Controlling every aspect of the operations.
If I ever state something about the tuning of a BR rifle I recommend people take it with a big grain of salt. I might just be talking over my head. If I'm talking about machining, it might be worth paying attention. Not sure if this meets your definition of "real machining" but there's a small peak at mine. Your turn Jerry.