I also just got the Holcomb SE six string delivered. Out of the box the finish is very good, but the binding at the neck pocket was botched and there looks like dust from the fretboard is stuck along the binding up and own the neck. Not super easy to notice and I don't really care about those things. I can probably sand the sloppy corner of the binding at the pocket down if I wanted.
The setup was the typically absurd nearly 2.0mm action height I get every single time I get an Indo. Once I adjust that to my preference and added some neck relief it's clear that this one has the same issues as pretty much every other Indo I've ever owned: poorly leveled frets. Open 3rd string is making a sitar sound and I can't figure out if it's the bridge or the first fret being too high/nut being cut too low.
I'm gonna have my guitar guy have a closer look at this and tell me what he thinks. If it only needs a fret level and polish, I'll keep it. If the nut needs work I'll probably send it back.
The thing that's crazy is that these PRS SEs are so good when the frets are sorted out and everything is setup correctly. So good that even though I know they should be coming to me better than they are, I don't mind buying them on a 20% discount and then getting them setup perfectly to my tastes with the money I saved.
That makes me 1/8 on Cor-Tek Indos out of the box. I genuinely wonder how much effort is even put into getting the frets level at this complex. There are so many different factories at the complex and different brands being made at different buildings, but one thing that I've seen consistently across all the brands I've tried is piss poor QC, specifically with fretwork. This PRS SE is the last one I buy from Indonesia. The volume they're doing at this complex clearly comes at the cost of the finer points being done correctly. I'm sticking with Korean WMI-made and Japanese-made from here on out.