TKM, in defense of the point I'm trying to make, osage can indeed make a good warbow without handshock. Because of it's density it would need to be more elliptically tillered than lighter woods so there's less moving mass. Because of osage's density it can make great warbows.
Woah, that was just your 666th post,... Hmmmm, wonder if that means anything...
Anyhoo, osage is (I guess
IMO) a horrible choice for a warbow. In a triple laminate I can see it being put to good use. But as a selfbow bow, it is just all kinds of dense. For heavier bows it can take the compression for sure, but handshock and fps loss is just inescapable no matter how much you reduce outer mass, till the dang thing is just whip tillered even. I think an elliptical tiller can be a good choice for a light draw weight longbow. An elliptical tiller will slightly reduce handshock, but then stack will be the result, that in lesser weights would not be noticeable, and stack is definitely not to be desired in a warbow. It will also end up taking more set than an even bending and even working bow. You really think for a 32" draw, you should keep the handle stiff? I'm not saying you can't get an alright longbow in general out of osage, I have 3 in the works right now, ridiculously, but these 3 longbows all have more than 3" reflex, that will add a bit of umph to the early draw weight to make up for things. And although I love my osage longbows, they never shoot as good as my mulberry, silver maple, hackberry, even ash, longbows. Yes, even ash, 2 1/2" of set and all. I can make a hackberry longbow that will smoke the living crap out of any osage longbow you could make at the same draw weight, and that is
NOT a challenge, because I know you would take me up on that right away,
. Anyway, my main argument was simply that osage was not the king of bow woods in all scenarios, such as, a warbow, not that you couldn't make a warbow out of it.