Most cheapo died or ebonized guitars aren't really maple at all. They are just cheap substitute woods that resemble maple and its properties, sometimes theres only a veener on top of the neck to act as fingerboard, and they don't hesitate to use the back or even the top woods either to make a fretboard out of it.
The tongue that extedts over the body would be much less stable than say rosewood or ebony. Maple is generally softer than ebony or rosewood too. Ebony and rosewood are naturally oily woods and therefore structurally even more stable as they don't dry out fast.
Also another factor would be weight and density. Maple can be heavy, even a maple fingerboard glued on a mahogany neck can put the rest of the instrument out of balance, because body only holds a large volume, but has very low mass.
This is just what I can come up with, but maple boards are indeed very rare on acoustics.
I bought em all.
Most cheapo died or ebonized guitars aren't really maple at all. They are just cheap substitute woods that resemble maple and its properties, sometimes theres only a veener on top of the neck to act as fingerboard, and they don't hesitate to use the back or even the top woods either to make a fretboard out of it.
The tongue that extedts over the body would be much less stable than say rosewood or ebony. Maple is generally softer than ebony or rosewood too. Ebony and rosewood are naturally oily woods and therefore structurally even more stable as they don't dry out fast.
Also another factor would be weight and density. Maple can be heavy, even a maple fingerboard glued on a mahogany neck can put the rest of the instrument out of balance, because body only holds a large volume, but has very low mass.
This is just what I can come up with, but maple boards are indeed very rare on acoustics.
Its because its not an optimal wood for a acoustic fretboard-hello? Duh- why didnt they make Stradavari with maple fretboards?? ..fool reposnds- "great question" :barf: