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Overly conservative buyers are the problem though, really - it's not just maple which should be much more common as a body wood.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
We really are a backwards bunch, aren't we?
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
My Dove is anything but neutral or nondescript - it's hugely powerful but detailed, fantastic for strumming but almost equally good for fingerpicking.
I did once have a Taylor too - nice guitar, extremely easy to play, but the very definition of an acoustic guitar with no specific character.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
I'd never thought about the maple dreadnought thing BigPaulie, but you are right: most of the well-known maple instruments are jumbos. I'm very fond of my Tacoma Thumderhawk, which is a maple jumbo.
For acoustic guitars, as Martin in their golden era (which then went on to be a more significant influence than others) only seemed to use Mahogany and Rosewood. Which isn't to say Maple wasn't used in the golden era, there are some wonderful maple Larson Bros guitars from the 30's, Gibson J200 and Guild used it for a number of guitars, I still lament not buying a maple Guild in Tin Pan Alley about 10 years ago it wasn't that expensive but it sounded remarkable.
It also really works really well for classical and flamenco guitars.
The G37s were nice and you can pick them up for very reasonable prices.
I had a chance to try one of the new F-512 maples and I agree that it was exceptional, which as a long-time Guild fan I was really pleased to see. I have 1973 F-412, but fantastic as it is the modern one sounded just as good and played better. The New Hartford versions were, I think, the best of the lot. I passed on the chance to purchase a brand new F-512 for £1500 just after Fender sold Guild in 2014. Still kick myself for not going for it.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
If it sounds good it sounds good...
if its for the purpose of bringing a guitar in at a certain price then you have to consider that too.
Surely it's just a matter of how an individual decides to spend their own money and make their own choices?
The opening post clearly states that the subject of discussion here is "solid maple b&s dreads". There's a whole forum to discuss anything else.
Yep. You certainly pay top dollar for them now - but worth every penny I reckon. I was able to play an F-512 (rosewood) and an F-512 Maple side-by-side. The rosewood one was excellent and I couldn't fault it, but the maple was in a completely different league. I noted that they sold the maple one just a couple of weeks later (not many people in a little town like Hobart buy $8000 guitars of any kind, let alone 12-strings!) but they had the rosewood one for some months before it went.
What a visual horrorshow! They start with a perfectly good, beautiful looking timber like Rock Maple and then cover the thing in ugly stain. That is just so stupid. I like a lot of things that Taylor does, but their idiotic habit of coating beautiful natural timbers in stain colours most people wouldn't use on a bloody floorboard, never mind an instrument, undoes a lot of their good work. I've even seen Taylor dye Blackwood - a timber people go out of their way to find and pay top dollar for because it is so good looking.
Not if you let the idiots at Taylor near it!
” Maple is occasionally used for soundboards, but more often for backs and sides, due to its flatness of sound and for its relative shortness of decay—an attribute that happens to make the wood more resistant to feedback in amplified situations than rosewood or mahogany. Not all builders find maple to be a suitable top material, though. “I wouldn’t typically recommend maple as soundboard tonewood,” says Andy Powers, Taylor Guitars’ master luthier. “One of its singular characteristics is that it’s almost perfectly transparent—it doesn’t sound like anything, which isn’t usually how you want a top to respond.”
https://www.tfoa.eu/nl/blogs/blog/tonewoods-explained/