Guidocorona - Not so in our isolation platforms, which we want largely to sound as dead as doornails.
I cannot possibly disagree with you more.
Over a number of years, I have built a number of composite platforms to be as acousticly dead as doornails only to find that when placed under my turntables, the sound also becomes dead and lifeless. I used materials such as MDF, ply, aluminum, plexiglass and cork and got a few to be totally quiet even when rapped with a knuckle. The more dead the platform, the more dead the sound.
The plywood platforms I have tried (composite or no) have all produced a very vague thin sound.
Placed and a solid maple platform the sound is much more natural, detailed and lively. To my ears, no contest. I cannot explain why that is, but I surmise it is due to the fact that trees (and consequently the wood) evolved over millennia to withstand whatever nature threw at it, and now very capable of dealing with vibration and resonances. Maple seems especially capable of dealing with resonances within the audio frequency range.
I think your postulation as the maple acting as a mechanical amplifier in violins and as such not suitable for audio somewhat misplaced. While maple is used for the instruments you mention, I have yet to hear a more natural presentation from my turntable on maple than any other platform regardless of material.
Regards
Paul
BTW, if you do have a 18x 15 of the plywood available, I would love to try it. I am not holding breath it will be better, but if I am wrong that would hardly be a bad thing for me.