The only difference between plucking a turkey and chickens is the size of the scalder.
If you use a scalder.
For chickens we use a turkey fryer to heat the water for scalding.
For turkeys we found this was not big enough for Great White and BB bronze and larger Heritage Turkey's. For those we used a heavy duty garbage can on the propane heater from our smoker. They also get really heavy when wet. We finally ended up using my engine cherry picker to lift them out of the scalder.
Dry plucking is the same as wet plucking, you just don't dip the bird in hot water so you don't have the wet bird small. But Scalding it a lot easier to get the large feathers out.
When plucking do the larger feather first while the bird is the warmest. As it cools down it gets hard to get the large feather.
Pull the feathers in the direction they lay on the bird.
Don't grab to many at a time as this may cause the skin to tare.
Once you have plucked run, cold water over the bird to help it cool down faster.
Pin feathers, or the tiny thin hair like feather that remain can be scraped off with a butter knife.
When plucking larger feather there may be a gel like substance. This is normal it part of the feather. Just wipe it off.
Some Turkey feathers tend to leave the die behind after plucking. Just wash it off when you do the cool down wash. Or when you do the final washing. (This is why most commercial birds are white.)
The last batch we did I finally got a cup type plucker, that you put on a cordless drill working. It was very fast but we had feathers all over. But it didn't get the larger wing and tail feathers. Also when you reverse the direction of the plucker is removes a lot of the pin feathers.
As far a skinning a turkey, when you bake or slow cook poultry you need the skin to help keep the meat from drying out.
Tom