[quote="Evan Gluck"]Gotta step in here, Banjoboatbob, how many large dedicated luthier supply places are there that you can think of?
Maybe 2 or 3. It does nobody any favors to try and take money away from them and give it to a place like Home Depot or Lowes. When you need an offset diamond fret file and the guy at Home Depot looks at you like you are nuts remember your post and all the other ones like this that I see when there are no more places dedicated to luthiers and repair folks like myself.
Don't get me wrong here, Ivan Cluck, I like Stew Mac, and they do have really, really good service, as well as great online tutorials and products, and the last thing I want to see is the specialty luthier shops closing down. I am also not suggesting that anyone attempt to buy anything quality at the Depoor. In a perfect world, we'd all just drive to the local luthier shop and get what we wanted, or borrow a neck joint router bit from the guy next door.
Any of you pros out there who are putting guitars out of your shops left & right would probably benefit from this tool. I only make 3 or 4 nuts a month and this tool would not pay for itself for a while. And in my case, money is a lot more valuable than time, so saving me 2 or 3 nuts wouldn't really save me a bundle. Lets see, 2 or 3 dollars total for a high-quality bone blank (if you buy someplace other than Stew Mac) and an hour or so of work. If you already have everything you want or need from SM, go ahead and get the thing. If nuts give you a hard time, by all means, get it! If you are like me and still setting up, that money is better spent elsewhere. Besides, dont I have to make 1000 nuts the hard way to get promoted to cocobolo?
Seriously, I have to stand by my comment about SM being overpriced on most things. How many of you out there buy your wood from them? Not too many I'd bet, great wood, but way more expensive than it should be. Same goes for bone blanks, all of their tapes(masking, etc.) except the double-sided (that is good and I can't find it cheaper elsewhere), DVD's and books. I can't tell you how many things I have bought that are the EXACT same item SM sells or extremely similiar for a considerably lower price. I understand that instrument building is an expensive hobby/job/adventure, and I wouldn't give up any of my StewMac tools, even if they did cost too much.
Having said that, let me finish as I began: StewMac is good & they are good people. Long Live Stewmac!
