NOTE: This was copied from a post Ron Thorn made on the GEAR PAGE FORUM on 06-06-2005 in response to a question regarding CNC use in guitar building.
First off, there is no shop, large or small, that is entirely CNC. It does not exist. I
think most individuals would be surprised by what a guitar component looks like when it
comes off a CNC. It is no where near complete, there is still plenty of hand sanding,
fitting, etc.
Here's a break down of what I do with the CNC and "by hand".
CNC:
Fretboards - you asked "why
they've gone to the CNC and what aspect of things is better". The fretboard is so
brutally important that it is ideal for CNC accuracy. I perimeter, slot, radius, and rout
for inlays all in one set-up on the CNC. Than insures spot-on fret slot placement (VERY
important to the quality of the guitar), consistent radii including compound radiusing,
and inlays that are very tight and free of sloppy filler/gaps.
Total time on the CNC: 20 minutes
Necks - Once the blank has been bandsawn ("by hand") to an oversized shape the
CNC will machine the neck carve, perimeter the neck and heel, shape the headstock, drill
for tuners, rout for truss rod and rout for logo & purfling. This is done through 6
different set-ups.
Total time on the CNC: 1 hour, 45 minutes.
Bodies - The CNC performs all cavity routing (top & back), neck pocket routing,
perimeter, top carve, and bridge location holes. On a pivot style trem, such as a PRS
trem, the location of those 6 holes must be perfectly inline to prevent binding of the
trem during use.
Total time on the CNC for a body with carve top: 3 hours
Inlays - Production inlays, such as my Firesuns and "T" logo, are cut on the CNC
for a perfect fit into the routes on the fretboard and headstock. I also "rip"
my purfling strips on the CNC too.
Total time for one guitar's worth: 15 minutes
Components - I machine my own 1-pc. brass tremolos, pickup covers and rings, knobs, back
plates, truss rod covers, and jack plates.
Total time worth: Approx: 10 hours.
Granted, all of these parts are "custom" for my guitars exclusively. I could
purchase all of these parts from guitar supply shops but prefer to make my own.
None of the above times include any programming, set-up or material preparation...all of
which are done "by hand".
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"By hand"
This term, I assume, includes feeding or pushing the component through a power tool such
as a planer, jointer, drum sander, bandsaw etc.
Fretboards:
Pre CNC: The wood is bandsawn to an oversize thickness and feed through a drum sander to
flatten.
Post CNC - The fretboard needs to:
Have the side dots drilled and glued in.
Inlays and purfling glued in.
Glue the board to the neck blank.
Level and true the board.
Fret and fretdress.
Total time "by hand": 13 hours for the above operations. My fret preparation
(cutting to length, nipping the tang, grinding the tang), fret installation and dress is a
total of 6 hours alone...no CNC for any of those operations.
Necks:
Pre CNC:
The wood is milled and rough cut to shape, using tracing templates, on a table saw and
bandsaw before it gets to the CNC.
Post CNC:
Install the truss rod and filler strip,
blend the neck into the fretboard,
inlay logo and purfling,
final shape the neck carve to spec using rasps, spindle sanders and lots of elbow grease
sanding then sanding some more,
gluing the neck into the body.
Total time "by hand": 8-10 hours easily.
Body:
Pre CNC:
Split top, joint edges, bookmatch glue together, sand to thickness.
Mill/sand body to thickness.
Locate and glue top to body spread then sand and drill locating hole for the CNC.
Post CNC:
Inlay purfling.
Drill for controls, side jack, wiring channels.
Radius back edge on router table.
SAND from 150 grit to 320/400
Total time "by hand": 10-15 hours depending on the wood species.
Paint:
Prep, mask off, stain, seal, color, top coat, lots of sanding in between, lots of sanding
after, buffing...the list goes on. No CNC for these ops.
Total time "by hand": 28 hours if all goes right the first time...it never does.
Assembly:
Installation of components (tuners, pickups, bridge, etc), wiring, cutting the nut, set
up.
Total time "by hand": 6-8 hours
The above is only visually productive acts, not including ordering wood and components,
e-mails, shipping, and just plain running the business.
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So, if we deduct the custom components and use off the shelf bridges, pickup rings, etc.
The average total time is:
CNC: 5 hours, 20 minutes.
"By hand": 69 hours, 30 minutes.
I consider my shop to be fairly state of the art, I have a large HAAS CNC for the
woodwork, and 2 smaller CNCs for the pearl inlay work. The only additional automated
CNC-type machinery would be a Plek and a robotic buffer. I could see that only reducing
the "by hand" total by a couple/few hours at most.
Not mentioned would be a custom one-off inlay that I, or my father, would do "by
hand" with a jeweler's saw and a mini router. The time spent on that could be from 45
minutes to 100s of hours depending on the design.
However small in comparison those 5 hours, 20 minutes seem...they are VERY important to
the outcome of the guitar. Accuracy and consistancy are unmatched. There are features,
such as my double offset purfling, that just can't physically be done by hand. Fretslots
accurate to within .0005" of an inch...heck, the wood will expand or contract more
than that by the time I turn the lights off in the shop at the end of the day...but it's
good to know they are as accurate as can be.
Inlays that are gap free and clean are important to me. I'm not a fan of filler and I
don't want that to be a part of my product. Even with hand cut and routed inlays, I feel
we are one of the best at making them tight and clean.
Can I build a guitar with out a CNC, sure.
WOULD I now if I didn't have one...I doubt it, because I would always feel the guitar
isn't as good as it can be WITH the help of a CNC.
There you have one take on it from a CNC builder.
Ron Thorn