Ready for the hate mail!
After seeing the thread on bow wood I thought we could start a nice little debate. In all seriousness I love osage. It's a beautiful, easily workable wood, and can make a great bow. But for a lot of reasons I don't think it's any better than other woods. It's true that osage can make bows of many different designs and take minimal set. But because it's so dense I believe that lots of osage bows are overbuilt, especially in the outer limbs. That density also allows osage to be one of the more sluggish woods out there despite taking less set. I know not everyone out there is in it for the speed but I believe any properly designed bow will be fast and durable for any use and not have to be osage.
This is a quote from Tim Baker on another property of osage.
"Properly made bows of the same length will be about the same thickness regardless of wood species or poundage, the lighter-wood bow merely wider per drawweight pound than the dense-wood bow. If the outer limb of the light-wood bow is made as narrow as can be for lateral stability, the dense-wood bow will have to be narrowed roughly in proportion to density if it's to be as mass efficient."
"So say a .40sg poplar bow is 1/2" wide five inches form its tip, and that if any narrower it would be unstable laterally. Now make a .80sg osage bow, same length, poundage, etc. To be as optimized as the poplar bow it will be 50% narrower. Osage is about 50% stiffer than poplar, but if the outer limbs are narrowed by 50%, something new comes into play: Reduce width and lateral stiffness reduces by a cubic function. If the poplar's outer limb was reduced in width by half it would become one-eighth as stiff. A wet noodle laterally. The osage's 50% extra stiffness would be insignificant; the outer limb would fold. This is why a best-designed osage bow will be slower than a best-designed lighter-wood bow. Can I get a high five for that explanation?"
Thoughts?