ThirdthumB said:Yes.
Basically, the more A means more figuring. I believe that there is no "international code" in qualifying the number of A.
JanVanHove said:Maple, quilted maple, birds eye maple, flamed maple, all have the same tonal characteristics. Only the appearance change between a 100 euro pliece of straight maple and a 1000 piece of AAAAA flamed maple.
The only maple that should have a different tone (from what I understand of wood and tone, which is not much...) is spalted Maple, since those black lines are actually faults in the solid grain of the wood...
Anyone care to confirm this? Or Am I completely wrong?
Ian said:And maple syrup kicks butt on baked beans and sausage... Canadian brunch
Ooops I'm off-topic... :lol:
iuserneim said:so, it's not a cliche with the maple syrup ?
i hardly dare to ask, but what do canadians brush their teeth with ?
JanVanHove said:iuserneim said:so, it's not a cliche with the maple syrup ?
i hardly dare to ask, but what do canadians brush their teeth with ?
It is a cliché...
I only put it on pancakes...
And we canadians brush our teeth with a pine branch, like all good northen-woodsmen do!
Ian said:YOU put it on pancakes, but I did put it everywhere :lol:
Ian said:I mean... I put it on everything I ate that day (nhs) !