Hi, Peter--
I'll do my best to answer your wonderful response in less than 10,00 words!😊
For starters, my goal would be to get as far as I have presently struggled, only to get it right. I'm approaching this with the idea of stages. The first stage would give me a " free plate" (that's what luthiers call the top or back of a violin when they are not attached to the rib assembly). The plate could be cut on both sides by a CNC machine.
The next step would be routing the purfling groove (contains the decorative banding nearer the edges of bowed string instruments), cutting the recurve, (the point where the arching reverses, dipping slightly below the plane of the sketch and then rising to a given distance from the outside edge of the plate), and then cutting the outline. This would require three tool changes, and I don't think I'm anywhere near ready for that yet.
Philosophically, I would look at the entire process and whatever work that the machine could do better or faster than the hand worker would be given to the machine, and whatever work can done better and faster by hand would be left to me. It's a process I hope will give me a base from which I could make improvements later.
The instruments are members of the string family that are either newly developed or that disappeared from use several centuries ago. While they are every bit violins, they are not made commercially. As to the level of fit and finish, I can accept less than shiny surfaces at first since I've already assumed that at least some handwork will be required no matter how well a machine can be programmed to do it.
Of course, none of this happens until I get to a certain point with Fusion 360. There's an "aha!" moment somewhere out there ahead of me, and I think things could go easier once I experience it. Especially with the help of folks like you and the others here.
And just to end on a humorous note, the "360" label on the drawing does not refer to Fusion 360, but rather to the length of the body in millimeters. Biggest family member, the sub-contra, is over 1200 mm, so you can see the advantages of starting small.
--Bob