People say that, oftentimes, no two pieces of lumber have the same sonic properties. But, there’s a reason why there’s a consensus about tone woods.
YMMV, but all of my builds now have VM construction with thicker maple necks. When the design allows it, I use one-piece necks. I love the attack and liveliness (not instability!) that this wood produces.
I have 2 floating trem guitars. One has a standard thin; the other has a 59 roundback. The roundback has a more vibrancy, depth, and resonance. It’s lively in the hand and acoustically rich. This translates electrically. The standard thin’s tone has less depth, but remains fairly vibrant. When I swap the neck around, these characteristics follow it.
When I need a thin, flat neck, I opt for qtr sawn for additional stability. That’s the consensus, though it may not be a fact. Some very intelligent and experienced people have created good arguments on both sides of the issue, so I just decided to choose based upon that.
Warmoth VM necks, in general, are incredibly stable. I almost never need to adjust the truss rods beyond initial setup - even when traveling.