Hello, I'd like to weigh in on this as well. I am not in agreement
with all of the folks who would prefer to make an estimate artificially
high for a customer to cover contingencies. I would instead prefer
a situation where I have enough confidence and trust in my tech that
a "time and materials" represents the best value for everyone. Then
I am only being billed for work actually done, and the tech gets fairly
compensated for work he has done -- "win/win" rather than "I win, you
lose."
As a mechanical music client, I understand the nature of the work and
am not looking to profit from a too-low estimate by the tech on the
front end (nor am I looking to be gouged for a too-high estimate to
cover stuff that _might_ happen). The key is to have a level of trust
with your tech that you feel comfortable you are being charged fairly.
I have been fortunate to almost always have had people (mostly one guy
-- a shout out here to Kirk Russell, Wakefield, Rhode Island) doing my
restoration work, with whom I had this level of comfort.
All this being said, it may make sense for a tech to give a range
of possible costs at the start of a project. And, believe it or not,
sometimes you still happen upon original work that doesn't actually
need replacing; this seems to happen sometimes with leather components
that were made with a higher-grade leather than is currently available.
Bob Taylor said this more eloquently in his 3/21 response to Ray Finch
[130321 MMDigest]:
"Many experienced rebuilders charge fairly for the hours needed to
complete the task at hand. That removes guess work and establishes
a level of fairness to both the customer and the technician. Advance
understanding of that is imperative to both."
My two cents.
Tim Baxter
Atlanta, Georgia
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