Re: Now THIS is How You Mass Produce High Quality Guitars
This is a curious post Doc. With respect, it doesn't sound like you have had much real comparison time with other world-class luthiers or instruments? Its both curious and erroneous to say the quality and detail doesn't exist unless you put it there. Can you clarify what does that even mean? Its a bold claim and disrespectful of some great luthiers, designers, instruments and companies. There is no flame here, just clarification. Are you saying you can make any $300 guitar come up to a standard of excellence to match a PRS, Sadwosky, Suhr, Collings? ...or (name your luthier). If so, how many skilled labor hours would that be and cost of upgrades? How do you change the wood, binding, finish, neck construction, truss material, etc. How do you add 'back in' the precision? We can certainly get a guitar playing really great, but its not the same thing.
I think any respectable luthier would all agree it starts with the wood. No way around that detail.
Thank you,
Cheers and respect, RG
I totally understand what you're saying. And I respect your opinion on this as well as many other threads you have posted to.
First of all, I've been at this for nearly 50 years, so I have had a decent amount of comparison time (I made my first 12 string acoustic guitar totally from scratch with no plans or templates in 1965). But notice that I haven't said anything about "world-class luthiers", only stock/retail instruments, and only in the $2-3000 range (that excludes custom guitars). Also in another post I admit to not ever playing a MM and that may well be an exception (but it IS hard to imagine).
How many hours I put into adding more excellence to a guitar depends upon the guitar, its original condition, and what I want to specifically accomplish with that guitar. It can be anywhere from 5-100 hours.
Obviously I don't ever "change the wood", it would be a new build then rather than an "improvement". And I can't make
ANY $300 guitar into a PRS, etc. Some are obviously just beyond help. But, yes, I have stripped many down to the bare wood, reshaped, refinished, improved fretwork, nuts, and bridges, and all electronics. Some guitars I've put in $5-800 and many many hours of labor. Yes it would be cheaper to buy a PRS, but I'd still have to do some work even on that.
I haven't purchased or played any new guitar that I couldn't have improved on its quality, especially the fretwork and setup. Again, no slam to good luthiers out there that do as good or better work than me...Just refering to new instruments.