Not to insult any of the professional smiths out there, but do the work was/is not that hard (and I'm a minister, but did do 2 years of a Tool & Die apprenticeship 30 years ago). The hard is knowing what to do and how things work. Dick Heinie is a good friend of mine and over the years I have pumped information out of him, that helped a lot. Dick, in case you're reading this, I still want you to build me another gun (and I didn't ask all those questions over the years planning this build).

It is hard to damage or make a huge mistake when all you have is emory cloth glued on a stick or dowl rod.
As a side note, I did also acquire a Caspian frame and slide, they are a lot more work since they leave extra material every place you are going to fit something (would have been nice to know that ahead of time). I think I got a little over confident and that frame now reside with George Smith to get some welding done to fix what I did -- put aside the the emory and figured this part needed a dremel.

It is almost all cosmetic, but he Dick is going to want to see what I did and that excuse won't fly. Bottom line is that since I am not a professional and don't have an FFL or a business license, I could get the same fun from Hienie, Yost, Ned or others for not much more. But I had so much fun.