Fred, I may need to take some lessons on efficiency from you [

].
But a couple things that take me longer...
1. My Vicmarc is temporarily sitting on my little tablesaw, so I'm currently cutting the blanks on my bandsaw.
2. Both my bandsaw and my drill press are configurations of my shopsmith, so it takes me longer than 2-3 minutes just to remove said bandsaw, move other stuff out of the way, adjust table position, lock casters, unlock ways, stand up shopsmith into drill press config, put the jacob's chuck on, align the blank centering jig, put the drill bit in and, FINALLY, drill the darn hole. Thats why I do those in batch.
3. I don't pre-drill or pre-cut the blanks because most (read as all but a couple) of the pens I make come from the customer choosing a specific blank and pen style.
4. I do the CA or a multi-coat lacquer on every pen.
I think in general, the individual tasks in their purest forms probably take me as long as you. Its just all that process stuff that tends to take the time away.
I guess I just want people to stop using time as a measure of a good pen! If a highly-experienced, top-o-the-line turner finishes a pen in 30 minutes, then that actually might be LONGER than a person who has turned for a year, takes 2 hours, and is very methodical. And both pens could be equally impressive.
By the way, according to my wife - who measures it from the time I walked out the kitchen door to the time I walk back IN from the shop, it takes me 2 - 3 times longer than I <b>TOLD</b> her it would take [

].
Keep up the great pens, everyone.