David, I recall being as industrious as you are when I was younger. You have done a lot of work on a concept I might have tackled if I had known how to use Excell.
I like both your charts VERY much. I sorted the arrow chart for specific gravity with largest first. If you do that and drop down to .45 SG, then look only at woods that have a MOE above 1,340,000 or so, there is a looooong list of good arrow woods. I had noticed before that black spruce should give Sitka spruce a run for its money.
The only discouraging thing is that lots of those woods are not marketed as such--might just be called "fir" or "spruce" without further identification.
Also discouraging is that where red and black spruce are harvested and milled, the logs are just slabbed off to be square and the best arrow wood--the outer slabs--is just chipped up for biomass or some other ignominious use.
When I lived in Maine, i could now and then get such slabs from a mill near me. I still have a few slabs of red pine (Pinus resinosa), but here in W. Kentucky, the only softwoods are loblolly pine (pretty heavy) and ERC (pretty floppy).
Thanks for making that chart. I have saved a copy and will guard it carefully.
Jim Davis