Historically, it's just kind of weird. I don't think there were such a thing as maple boards before Leo Fender; and everybody just knows that if you want to upgrade you go from maple to rosewood. The fact that maple turned out to be a good fretboard wood doesn't enter into it, because... if something was true 50 years ago, it's got to be ever more truth-ish now! And I'm pretty sure Leo didn't do it originally because he thought maple was better than anything else. :laughing3: I mean, it's like cherry - even though cherry is held to be a nicer wood than alder by cabinetmakers, and cherry is almost certainly indistinguishable from alder in a blindfold sound test (+poplar, all three), a guitar maker would be crazy to make guitars out of cherry alone, because Leo Fender "proved" that alder is what you make guitars out of. The fact that it used to be cheaper couldn't have anything to do with it.... I think the first time I saw a maple board on a "fine" guitar was Zakk Wylde's signature Les Paul, and I imagine that when you told the boys at Gibson they could charge MORE for a Les Paul with a maple board that for a Les Paul with an ebony board, much mirth ensued.