My two oldest sons (12 and 11) have been doing great at their guitar lessons, and it's time to build them some really cool electrics. The designs are works in process, but they will both have carved maple top plates. So I took them down to the wood store today to shop for some maple. We came home with this board:
This board is 1-3/4" thick, 8-1/2" wide, and 60" long. The only defect is the small half-a-knot that I positioned just below the center of the photo, which doesn't go deep enough into the wood to survive thicknessing and carving. It is plenty of material to make two 5/8" thick (with some to spare) bookmatched tops and have a bunch left over for headplates, scraps to test finish on, etc.
Now, this local hardwood store I went to is far from cheap. $23/bf for their quilted maple. Ouch! With tax, this board cost me $160. Pricey for domestic hardwood.
But be that as it may, here's my resawing thoughts. There was a thread a while back on the pros and cons of resawing your own lumber. Not to restart that debate, but check out what some of the luthier supply houses are getting for quilted tops for electrics. (Look at the 5/8" ones that are thick enough to carve, not the 1/4" caps.) Don't forget to add on tax & shipping. I'm not sure where this wood would grade on their grading scales, but even grading it pretty modestly, $160 bucks after tax for two quilted tops is quite a savings.
Admittedly, I confess that I have some other costs associated with buying and resawing the lumber. The hardwood store was about four or five miles from my home, and I get really bad gas mileage. So it probably cost me 3/4 of a gallon of gas and 6 miles wear-and-tear on my family car. That's gotta be worth $3, anyway. And it took about an hour-and-a-half to take the family down and dig through the bins. What's that worth? I guess it depends on your perspective --- I'd probably pay at least $20 to spend an hour-and-a-half of quality time with the wife and kids, but if your wife is a nag and your kids have ADD, then maybe you have a different calculus. Then there's the wear and tear on my bandsaw blade; I can probably only resaw a hundred guitars worth of figured maple on a $30 blade, so that's at least 65 cents worth of blade wear. Another dollar or so for power, because electricity is so expensive here in California. So add all that up, and it probably cost me $164.65 for two tops, minus the $20 for getting some good family time in there.
I stand by my view that if you're going to be making a few, you can save quite a bit of money and get great wood by investing in a decent bandsaw and finding a good lumber store. Electric bridges and tuning machines are a different story.