To all of you,
I did like Tim's approach that debunks the material derivative playing against the actual cost and profitability of shop drawings.
The problem that I see with estimating the cost of shop drawings based on percentages is the incremental increase or decrease of even 1% is substantial, I think Gustavo tosses us a bone!
Furthermore, what is the client getting and how does our service serve them. I mean receptiveness might be necessary and the client may want to pay for it-Jason touch this.
I, break out what ever I have to and scope what I'm doing or risk arguing later about how it should have been done it!
Mikhail says healthy shop drawings, I like that and I'm quite certain that QCP has a good idea about where that begins.
Residential detailing can be a run on "directed trial and error" messy and time consuming, we learned that back when we all bosses in engineering departments and "Cabinetware" work stations!
I want to get paid for what I do and the professionalism/ knowledge that's behind it. Once I'm sent the PO or email of intent-I stuck with it, there's no looking back.
I'd image Gustavo is right-meat on the bone or they'll do it in-house, a constantly changing tide that continues to teach.
I've seen Tim's work, Mikhail's work, I think Jason's...its awesome stuff, but as Gustavo says what is on the shop floor!!!