When Jay asks what machine someone should buy to start a small job shop, Andrew gives a direct answer: without committed, repeatable work, he wouldn’t buy anything. But both Jay and Andrew do offer their recommendations, and that opens a broader conversation about the unstable economics of prototypes, customers who send sketches instead of CAD, and why certain jobs are better routed to services like Xometry or Upwork.
From there, Jay and Andrew compare Haas and Brother machines—control systems, tool changers, rigidity, multi-axis capability, and real reliability differences. Andrew explains why he favors the Brother S700 for multi-sided work and describes the problems he’s seen with chain-style ATCs, including misloads that can send tools straight into the table.
Around that, Andrew talks about his experience at Boombastic, the new generation of talent showing up there, and who else might benefit from attending.