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My understanding is that spruce is selected for its stiffness first of all so that it can be made as thin and light as possible whilst still retaining enough strength to ensure the string tension doesn't cause problems. Adirondack spruce being better in this regard that Sitka, hence the higher prices for Adirondack.
Then builders look for tight, parallel grain structure. I don't know if that if for strength or for just the visual appeal of the thing, or both.
So I guess a very tight, straight grained Adirondack-topped instrument is going to be a higher price than one with wider spaced Sitka.
The back and sides are where the pretty woods are used. Is the price difference you have noticed due to different back-and-side woods? For example, I would expect an instrument with quilted AAAAA bubinga back and sides to be more expensive than one with a middling Indian rosewood back and sides.
Given the abundance of good sounding production line guitars out there, it makes me wonder slightly if it’s all a bit of cork sniffing hocus pocus. If all this complex voicing stuff was so crucial then the production line acoustic really is a total crap shoot of a gamble. Mabye it is and mabye classic production line models have hit on such a good formula that the quality of top is less important and voicing is just “close enough” on average. Admittedly I’ve never played a true luthier built, single hand crafted instrument.
Have put clips of this guitar on the a couple of forums not sating what it was a and some folks thought it was a Collings ! - it cost me £500.
I’d go as far as to say u’r right, and that production designs often override the different components - so ya end up with ‘That Martin sound’ or what ever.
A bit of time with google brought out the following threads
http://onemanz.com/guitar/readers-questions/martin-wood-grading/
https://www.acousticguitarforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=250196
Having a read through now, they have Grades upto 8 and the higher the number the greater the grade.
Still, the number of anomalies and bear claw on even higher end models (just scroll through the photos on Peach) kind of suggests they may now be looser with the grading. Mabye it’s a deliberate move for the environment.