How a Drone Racing Kid Ended Up Running a One Man Machine Shop | 52 episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 23, 2026 · 1H 32M

How a Drone Racing Kid Ended Up Running a One Man Machine Shop | 52

from The Impractical Machinists · host Practical Machinist

Taylor Jenkins didn't start out wanting to be a machinist. He wanted to fly planes.Then COVID hit, his plans changed, and he ended up in a composites program working with carbon fiber instead, chasing the same hands-on itch he'd had since high school building RC gliders and racing drones. From there he landed a job as a CNC operator in southern Utah almost by accident, just because he could already read a blueprint.A few shops, a few good mentors, and one really bad boss later, Taylor ended up running his own shop, Lone Wolf Precision, completely solo. No crew, no robots, just him, two Brother mills, and an auto saw he's genuinely proud of.In this episode, we get into:- His path from drone racing and RC planes into machining (it's a weirder story than you'd think)- The probe crash that almost killed his new Brother machine, and what it taught him about automation actually eating your "free time" instead of giving you more of it.- The aerospace shop that trained him right, including learning the CMM inspection feedback loop the hard way- The bad coworker situation that finally pushed him to leave that job for good- The six weeks he had to buy a machine and make a brand new production contract work, after turning down a job offer to do it- How he finds new work (hint: it's not LinkedIn), and why he fires customers who aren't worth the headache- The saw stop he designed because every shop bandsaw stop he's ever used has been garbageIf you're running your own shop, thinking about starting one, or just like hearing how somebody actually built theirs from the ground up, this one's worth the listen.🔔 Subscribe, Rate, and Review to never miss an episode. Your feedback helps us bring you the content you love!Drop your comments or topic ideas in the forum.Or listen to our podcast on YouTubeConnect with the hosts on Instagram:Patrick Mcclintock: IG or PM@Job Shopper TNCameron Graves: IG or PM@MachiningiscoolBradley Thomas: IG or PM@MarvelThanks for listening!!!

Taylor Jenkins didn't start out wanting to be a machinist. He wanted to fly planes. Then COVID hit, his plans changed, and he ended up in a composites program working with carbon fiber instead, chasing the same hands-on itch he'd had since high school building RC gliders and racing drones. From there he landed a job as a CNC operator in southern Utah almost by accident, just because he could already read a blueprint. A few shops, a few good mentors, and one really bad boss later, Taylor end...

NOW PLAYING

How a Drone Racing Kid Ended Up Running a One Man Machine Shop | 52

0:00 1:32:12

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The Impractical Machinists?

This episode is 1 hour and 32 minutes long.

When was this The Impractical Machinists episode published?

This episode was published on June 23, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Taylor Jenkins didn't start out wanting to be a machinist. He wanted to fly planes.Then COVID hit, his plans changed, and he ended up in a composites program working with carbon fiber instead, chasing the same hands-on itch he'd had since high...

Can I download this The Impractical Machinists episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!