How much time does it take a builder to make a mandolin? Nothing ornate, just a handbuilt mandolin?
Regards,
Frank
How much time does it take a builder to make a mandolin? Nothing ornate, just a handbuilt mandolin?
Regards,
Frank
Carved body or flattop? A-style? F-style? Type of finish? All are factors.
Doug Brock
2018 Kimble 2 point (#259), Eastman MD315, Eastman MDA315, some guitars, banjos, and fiddles
Experience, skill level and tools might also be factors.
Not all the clams are at the beach
Arrow Manouche
Arrow Jazzbo
Arrow G
Clark 2 point
Gibson F5L
Gibson A-4
Ratliff CountryBoy A
Carved body A style?
It doesn't take me any time. I walk into my shop and time disappears.
Anyway, you're asking the wrong question. "It" doesn't take any time. You take the time. If you want to build one in 3 days, you can. If you give yourself a year, you'll take your time and get it right and be proud of the result.
belbein
The bad news is that what doesn't kill us makes us stronger. The good news is that what kills us makes it no longer our problem
belbein has it right. A build will take as long as you want it to depending on the quality you're shooting for. My first build took 18 months (working on it on weekends), but subsequent builds get faster. Expect to make a lot of jigs/fixtures/shop tools/etc. on your first build too.
My current project was built in 2013, came back to my workbench in 2015, and been in process since (long hiatus, many spasms of work, volumes of shop notes as I figured out what to do) and it's now ready for closing it up, refinishing and stringing. How many years is that? I don't care about the time spent: I care about the time wasted not spending time on it.
belbein
The bad news is that what doesn't kill us makes us stronger. The good news is that what kills us makes it no longer our problem
I average 160 hours per instrument. An F5 is around 250.
Andrew Mowry
Mowry Stringed Instruments
http://mowrystrings.com
Also visit me on Facebook to see work in progress and other updates.
I found when I told someone I made mandolins or showed them one almost always the first question was "how long does it take?" to which my stock answer was "too long".
took me 18 months for my first build, but learned to replace a top right off.. after almost 20 years now, I've got a little faster.. A styles take about 120 hours , and F styles take about 150 hours...
kterry
I count I'm damned near 400 hours with my latest builds... But I worked strictly with hand tools this time, no routers, tablesaws, bandsaws or such and do all the tinny Loar style details most folks don't even care for. Oh, I lied... except modest help of electric handdrill.
Adrian
^^^^This from one of the best folks in the country who is an absolute jedi master with a cnc!
The irony to me is that when confronted with these numbers, most people would run from the idea of attempting to build an instrument, yet if you told them they were only allowed 400 hours of facebook /insta / twitter / et cetera or mandolin cafe a year, they would claim it is not possible to limit oneself so much!
I remember working back "in the $#@@!%^&* factory" when I got fired for being too slow because I was only able to make 2 full mandolins a day BEFORE lunch; the beancounters wanted me to make 3, while still only paying $7 per hour!!!!!
Here is a build timesheet from about 9 years ago, before I decided it was better to NOT keep track of those details, after I had built approx. 120 mandolins with no cnc in the workshop.
Building is easy; finishing is where the real challenges start!
Being an amateur builder I have no time frame. I don't do a step until I have it worked out in my head, and every step is a new skill set. When I get to finishing, that's when I least want to rush it- if I feel it's sanded adequately, I know it needs a lot more. I appreciate all the advise I read from the experts on this forum- they are an invaluable resource.
Rob
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