yes I agree that some woods may be stronger with certain orientation,,
but most the time I think a solid one ring back is best for self bow,,,,or will give best odds for success
I have been making bows a long time,, and the accumulated knowledge from other guys as well has shaped my opinion,, probably a mere hundreds of years or so of bow making experience all together,,keep in mind that in the last 20 years the sharing of bow making experience has raised the level of wood bow making dramaticly,, and I think one of the reasons we dont see alot of edge grain bows,, keep in mind,, not everyone post what they are making,,,I would say most do not,..and the orientaion of wood in a fiberglass bow,, really does not relate to wood bows that much,, I have made them,,I enjoy making all wood bows,,, I think you will see with the level of bow making now, that what is giving the best results consistantly,, is what most guys are doing,,
and it is not that much different from what the Native American guys were doing all along,, they had thousands of years to figure things out,,most of there bows were flat grain, or most of the bows we can see now,, for what ever reason,, but I dont think it was just tradition or accidental,,
or lack of being open minded,, thats just my thoughts,, from making and studying bows for the last 30 years,,
I have a friend that has devoted his career as archieologist to Native bows and arrows, and he tells me what we can see now,, is a very small percentage of what existied in the last thousands of years,, there is really alot we dont know,, and may never know..
I learn something almost every week here,one key point I think is important is that with edge grain as back, you have a mix of early wood and late wood,, that could weaken the back in some species of wood,, and that some have a better ration for a edge grain back,, I never really thought about it like that ,, and was a nice realization for me,, as always I like to learn something,,
I just knew that back in the day when I made alot of edge grain bows,, I always rawhide backed them them to compensate for the run out,, that that I felt might compromise the life of the bow,,