Ok gonna allow myself to comment on this debate again.
A couple thoughts of mine, keep in mind this is coming from someone who just makes bows and doesn't put a lot of thought into into the science of it. I've never worked
yew but have no doubt that I would love it, shot only one of em', made by Pearlie and it was sweet. If I had the bow building skill level of him or Bryce or Gordon and had a bunch of yew it might be my favorite wood, don't know.
I've used about 15 different woods cut from here in the midwest and will spend hours trying to get a bow out of any
old stave I can get my hands on just for the challenge and joy of bow making. As it turns out though my best shooters
and most durable and dependable hunting bows have come from osage, with black locust coming in a close second.
I spend quite a bit of time hunting and can be rough on bows and expose them to all kinds of extremes, cold, hot, wet, dry and abuses like accidently banging rocks and such while climbing, osage can take this abuse. That being said I kinda think black locust may knock osage off the top for me once I get a little better at working it into a bow. Just have a feeling that I'll get one made one day from locust that will out perform my best osage pound for pound
and locust seems to take abuses well like osage. The only question being will it still maintain that performance year after year like my osage bows seem to. So for me anyway, and from my experiences with the woods I've worked, and with my focus on hunting bows, ........ it's OSAGE.