I'm not big into all this physics talk, I've never shot a bow through a Chrono, and I've never done a F/D graph. But I do have one question. If osage is inferior, why are there so many osage character bows? You see them with big holes in the limbs, wind checks, knots, bug damage, heck, I have one with a bullet hole in it. I have seen a few character bows from other woods, but not many, and not with the same amount of flaws that an osage bow can withstand. Why are osage bows able to still work with all of those problems?
Each wood has its best designs and limits and if built within those limits they are fairly equal performance wise. I like osage because of the many reasons Blackhawk mentioned. The most important reason I prefer it is because it is tough. I can screw a lot of things up on an osage bow and still end up with a working bow at the end.
I think arrow speed is an overused way of judging bows. How did Native Americans make bows for thousands of years and not know how many F.P.S. they shot? I'll take a tough dependable bow over a fast, on the edge bow any day. But that's just me. And this is just my opinion from my simple brain.