So when I was at my local hardware store the other day, picking up some things that I needed, I did what I always did, went straight to their wood selection. They didn't have much of anything, but they did have this piece of maple (or what I assume is maple) that had some incredible birdseye on it. If I didn't have other things that I needed to do I would have picked it up.
So today I am hoping that I will go back and it will still be there. My only concern is that since it appears it was sawed out to be a piece of wood that you were supposed to layout on your deck, not a piece of wood to become a fingerboard. I am assuming then that it is flatsawn, not quartersawn. Now still being new to the guitar building world, and more specifically the world of guitar woods, is was wondering if a flatsawn fingerboard would be acceptable. From the looks of it, I could get at least 8 fingerboards out of it, if I resawed it correctly.
Anyone have the answer? Is a flatsawn fingerboard structurally sound or no? I would certainly sell a few fingerboards that I don't keep, or even better, use Luthier Auctions to sell them!
_________________ -Rob Eckert Ann Arbor, Michigan
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