Haha, sorry if I came across like an a-hole, perhaps my reply was a bit combative…Opinions are like what? Yup. You guessed it
I think we agree on a lot, someone who is skilled and experienced at their craft with proper quality control is money well spent. You may or may not loose that in a higher production facility. I’ve had a one off prefit made for me, it was made to order, deposit to delivery was 9 weeks. I see no difference in quality in that product vs my local gunsmith chambered and fitted barrel who had my action in hand for 15 months before completion. However, my prefit wasn’t an off the shelf mass produced prefit, and I see a distinction there.
I just disagree with your sentiment about there being a difference between a gunsmith and a machinist for this type of work, it’s just a title. And your view of conventional machining superiority vs CNC machining, you can end up with identical products with either process, the difference has nothing to do with the quality of the end product and everything to do with efficiency and repeatability.
Skills are skills, this isn’t an opinion it’s a fact. A lack of skill or quality control from any person or business isn’t the result of professional title or a production process.
For what it’s worth I have no skin in the game, I don’t make barrels and my trade is not reproducible via computer numerical control.