(1) Before any debate on bow woods can be had, you have to state first what you want your bow to do.
Are you going for pure speed? Are you trying to make a bow that will take a lot of abuse? Are you trying to make a bow that doubles as a back scratcher?
After answering that you can discuss what woods will be suited to producing the desired results in your bow,
(2) Design is not everything. Otherwise a thread about Osage being inferior would be a total waste of time.If design was everything, no wood would be inferior. But some are, there is a reason some woods are used more often for bows than others. However, the folks who know (not me) say that when it comes to speed most bow woods can be designed to get pretty damn close in the speed department.
(3) I believe that elasticity, an work-ability are two of the most important traits in a good bow wood for most any kind of bow. To quote Steve (who is strangely absent from this debate, probobly because he's had it 1000 times before)
"Higher density woods are not necessarily faster than lower density woods. The potential mass you build a bow at has more to do with elasticity than it does density of the wood. A wood that is more elastic can be built lighter than a bow with less elastic wood."
Osage is a heavy, elastic wood. Yew is a light, elastic woods. Very little else comes close the elasticity of osage and yew. Hmmm and they are the most commonly used bow woods.
And for the phsyics nerds lets not forget this:
A typical good energy breakdown released when a bow is shot:
70% - arrow kinetic energy
7% - string kinetic energy
10% - hysteresis (internal friction and damping generating "heat" in the bow arms)
13% - limb kinetic energy in the form of vibration generated in the power stroke
So, the 23% of energy loss in hysterisis and limb vibration are the percent we can make gains in from wood choice and design. Reducing hysterisi and limb vibration should be the thing that speed junkies think about most. Guess which woods tend to have the lowest internal friction...elastic woods like yew and Osage. Short working limbs tend to be more effecient because they doen't vibrate as much. And you get short working limbs more easily with.... elastic wood.
I'm no osage junkie. I much prefer plum, and yew. But the wood has a lot going for it in the bow making department. I've heard that Osage doesn't like dry climates? Anybody want to weight in on that.
Gabe