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"I started my passion for firearms at an early age. Born in PA
and raised nearby on my Uncle Charlie's dairy farm where I was
involved with the daily chores of bailing hay, cutting corn and taking
care of the dairy herd. From starting with a Daisy Red Rider to
rifling ground hogs with my dad's sporterized 03A3 at 14, my youth was
filled with hunting and shooting adventure. My parents were very
supportive of my outdoor activities and would help me along with some
of the financial expenses involved. I would do odd jobs, farm work,
and mow lawns for people around where I lived to raise money for guns,
and reloading equipment. But, when you are 11 to 15 years old and only
making $3.00 a day at the farm and $5.00 for a mow and trim, you think
you will be 60 by the time you come up with the cash to purchase that
reloading outfit you need now. So, from the graces of my parents my
father would work a 50/50 split with me for any of the real expensive
items. He said that he would probably use it 50% of the time, but in
reality it was for me and he did not use any of the equipment much. In
the back of my mind I know this, and I am still grateful today for my
parents support and generosity.
Even though I tinkered with firearms and associated equipment, I did
not get deep into the wild side of gunsmithing until I was in High
School. In my Junior and Senior years I meet a very good shop teacher
Mr. Kish. He was our only shop teacher at Franklin High school. I have
to explain for a moment the School situation, everyone thinks New
Jersey is like Beirut, and maybe some of it is, but the majority of
Northern NJ was just plain simple farmland at that time. For example,
Hamburg, the town I grew-up in, our 8th grade graduating class only
had 13 kids in it. This wasn't because the rest of the flock was to
short on brains to graduate; it was we only had 13 kids. So, Franklin
high school was a conglomerate of about 4 towns worth of students to
get enough people to make a respectable size class. With this said,
the graduating class was still only 96, a very short number still.
Back to Mr. Kish, he was a very skilled man that had a short fuse for
ignorance in his class, so you walk to his music or you were out.
After a few months I noticed Mr. Kish was working on some personal
projects on breaks and free time. These projects looked like gunstock
blanks, so being me I had to investigate. In a short time I learned
that he was a gun lover and specialized in authentic reproductions on
muzzle-loaders, which he did a wonderful job at. He was a purist and
would insist on proper craftsmanship and techniques. After getting to
know Mr. Kish I scheduled all of my free periods in shop. Along with
my regular projects I started working on guns in school, yes, I did
say guns in school. It was not too long ago when you could see me
coming though the hall ways with a rifle case going to shop class. I
did a few projects with Mr. Kish, a muzzle-loader and a sporterized
6.5 jap which I still have in my collection today.
My life at the gun shop started in my high school years, where I would
work part-time at the Sussex arms and ammo store. The pay was not
great, but I got a nice discount on items. This discount was sometimes
quite big and I think it was more generosity from the nice man and
lady that owned the store, than what I was really worth in services.
We always had a great time and met some very interesting people which
shared our same interests.
Our shop in high school was really a
glorified wood shop. It was not equipped with the proper metal working
equipment to really do justice in the world of gunsmithing. While
attending Franklin High I also enlisted in night courses at the local
vocational high school to see if the metal working would peek my
interest and it did. About my junior year I got the bug to investigate
what I really wanted to do with my life. I think everyone crosses that
bridge one day and realizes that the real world life is coming upon
them. To help justify my thoughts on the future I talked with my
parents, the school guidance counselor and of course the local
gunsmiths that I knew. My parents and the guidance people told me
about the same things, but the questions I asked the gunsmiths really
helped me make up my decision. The 100 dollar question was," If you
had to do it over, what would you do different"? The answers varied
depending on the gunsmiths specialty, but the one reply that was
common was, "I would have gone to school for an engineering background
and gotten my Journeyman's tool making papers." Why I asked? The
answers were basically the same, "We can only go so far with the
knowledge we have, and without the tool making the gunsmiths did not
understand or could implement the proper processes, material
selections, heat-treatments and other technical knowledge into their
work without guessing. Now I got it, the recipe for my future! So I
applied for acceptance at Penn State Williamsport campus for
tooling/manufacturing Technology and was accepted. After two years of
intense studies in everything from Quality control to metallurgy, I
graduated with an AAS and was offered an apprentice journeyman's
position at IBM in Endicott, NY. I had many job offers at graduation,
but IBM offered 10 people per year to go through an intense, hands on,
Journeyman program which you either "walked the line" and got good
grades or you were out. I was used to this pressure because my dad
made these same words clear to me when I enrolled at Penn State. I
worked hard throughout my apprentice and in 2 years walked to the head
of the IBM awards room where I received my Journeyman tool and model
maker's certification and the IBM Journeyman pin. These I will cherish
for the rest of my life.
While I was working for IBM, I also
acquired my own FFL and started doing gunsmithing and opened a small
retail store. At this time I started doing more custom work for many
individuals and Dan Wesson Firearms of MA. Which eventually lead me to
purchase Dan Wesson and Wildey firearms in 1996. That year, with
support of my wonderful wife, I left IBM to live my dream and operated
Dan Wesson and a machine shop I was involved with. During 1996 until
2005, and with help from many extremely good people, we brought Dan
Wesson back to life. As growth with any business goes, you realize
that you can only go so far and it's time to pass the reins onto
someone else that can hopefully take it to the next step. I have many
years now working with individuals throughout the gun industry and
have a good understanding of what are the good products and what are
not. I have for years waded through the matrix of products being
offered to the public and I can tell you that there are many people
out there offering excellent products and there are also many that are
offering garbage and don't have a clue as to what the customer really
needs or desires. That is why Fusion Firearms was formed, to take out
the guessing and give customers parts, assemblies and sub-assemblies
that will perform properly and reflect the value for which customers
are paying out their hard earned money for. Fusion will continue to
add customer worthy products that pass our rigid, quality standards
and that we feel good about offering to our customers. Where will the
trail go from here? One never knows, but one thing for sure, we are
going to build some very exclusive firearms, meet many interesting
people and have some real good fun." |