
gvarko
New member
I was on vacation last week and did something I always wanted to do, tour the Martin Factory. My website is down for a redesign so I put photos from my tour up there for your enjoyment.
Here's a few Martin quick facts from the tour:
They ship on average 250 guitars a day, M-F.
They build every model every day, they don't do specific runs on select days.
Every new Martin comes with a hard case. If the dealer is telling you otherwise they are lying.
They do not sell seconds or damaged items, they are destroyed.
Employees are allowed to purchase one guitar per year at a substantial discount.
Once a guitar is done it goes in it's case and on a rack for 8 days. It is brought down and re-checked before shipping. They do this for every guitar they ship.
The body and neck get serial numbers at the earliest possible stage of building. They travel different paths to completion and are matched up at the end.
The quality control is outstanding. They have a recording studio in the factory and will routinely pull a guitar off the line and lay down a track to insure quality.
The setup department is the only area where you are required to know how to play a guitar.
They have a machine shop on-site and make some of the custom machinery you see in the pics.
Enjoy the tour:
www.woodguarden.com
Here's a few Martin quick facts from the tour:
They ship on average 250 guitars a day, M-F.
They build every model every day, they don't do specific runs on select days.
Every new Martin comes with a hard case. If the dealer is telling you otherwise they are lying.
They do not sell seconds or damaged items, they are destroyed.
Employees are allowed to purchase one guitar per year at a substantial discount.
Once a guitar is done it goes in it's case and on a rack for 8 days. It is brought down and re-checked before shipping. They do this for every guitar they ship.
The body and neck get serial numbers at the earliest possible stage of building. They travel different paths to completion and are matched up at the end.
The quality control is outstanding. They have a recording studio in the factory and will routinely pull a guitar off the line and lay down a track to insure quality.
The setup department is the only area where you are required to know how to play a guitar.
They have a machine shop on-site and make some of the custom machinery you see in the pics.
Enjoy the tour:
www.woodguarden.com
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