I do a lot of documentation, and end up with a good file folder on each instrument. Some of the contents of that folder get transferred to a page in a book in condensed form, and I use both the folders and the book all the time in building. It's really handy to be able to pull out the records on all of the guitars you made of a given model, and see what happened when you made changes. And, as you say, Kevin, it's really a heck of a time saver in the long run, as you don't have to keep trying stuff over and over.
Even though I've been at it a long time, I have not built as many guitars as some of you. Part of that has to do with fact that I make a lot of different things: if I had one of every model of everything I've built, it would be at least 35 different instruments, and there are several other things I would like to try. These days about half of my time is spent on 'fiddles' of various sorts. My total for harps and hammered dulcimers together is nearly up to the number of guitars I've made, and the mountain dulcimers are 'way ahead. It's a lot easier to jig up and set up an efficient space if you specialize. I could also build a lot faster if I wasn't teaching in the same shop twice a week, but at least that forces me to sweep up!
My big problem is the dratted 'science' stuff. The more I learn about how these things work the more things there are that I feel I should measure. After a while as a builder you come up with a limited suite of measurements that give you enough information to achieve a decent level of consistency, but there are several possible sets of such measurements, and it's interesting to see how they correspond. In other words; it's too easy to get side tracked! ;)
I built the 'corker' guitar, with no binding, rosette or finish, but with a removable neck and 20 holes in the side, in about three days. A commercial rosette and simple bindings would have added maybe a day to that. It's hard to account for finish time: I either varnish or French polish, and with both the way I do them a lot more time is spent waiting for the stuff to dry than actually working on it. 8-12 hours of actual work over a week or so? Of course, I don't just spend the waiting time sorting my sock drawer. So, yeah, 40-45 hours, I'd guess. As I say, my big bottleneck right now is the rosette: I spend more than a day on that, and another day in voicing (and writing all the stuff down, doing tests, printing charts, etc.).
In the end, you pays yer money and takes yer choice. We each do what we feel is important, and try to make it all work out well enough. I decided some time ago that I just can't get all that excited about simply making money. If I'm not learning something or pushing my skills I feel like it's just a waste of time. The trick is to keep _enough_ money coming in, and enough orders going out, so that nobody gives you too much grief. Sometimes it's hard to strike that balance just right, but I've managed to keep the same wife for 36 years and we've put three kids through college, so it's possible.
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