Arunas, I'm always careful to admit I stole the whole thing from Dan Erlewine, and his terrific book, 'The Guitar Player Repair Guide', available thru Stewart-McDonald (
www.stewmac.com), who stocks lots of parts and many more terrific books regarding guitar building and repairing.
As you get used to the process (and believe me, I turned my Spoiler into a LOG more than once until I got it straight in my mind), you will associate the way it feels with the way you set it up. Your hands will know when it's right, and when it's wrong, and when it's wrong, you'll know what to do. Believe me, if I can figure this out, ANYBODY can !
This is really important, as a lot of us don't live anywhere near good guitar techs. Now you won't have to use one for setups, you can do it yourself, and that is not to be under-estimated.
After all of the 'glamor' of Alembics, the great secret, if you will, is that they are designed (whether deliberately or not, I'd love to know) to be maintained by the player. Adjustable brass nut. One piece brass bridge. Plug in electronics, damn few solder joints. And on and on. Most of the things on basses most of us are used to (wood screws, crappy solder/shielding, half-ass pickups and wiring, plastic nuts, pot metal bridges, etc.) just don't exist on these things.
I often think Ron is working on folding space and warp drive, but these things do make a case that he really considered perpetual motion machines.
J o e y