Less than ideal is relative to draw length and at 72" long with a 32" draw the length is plenty. If you send me an osage stave I will make you an osage warbow you would be happy with. Promise.
I see what your trying to do, your just trying to score some "inferior osage",
. Ryoon, seriously, I guarantee you, there is nothing I am doing in regards to warbows that is in anyway significantly different than whatever you are doing. If you gave that bow an elliptical tiller like you have purposed, that stacked like heck for the last 2", you can go ahead and keep it. If I remember correctly, your hickory was tillered very well, and not in anyway an elliptical tiller. Tiller shape and string angle make a big difference in the draw in heavy weight bows I have found, and the effects of either are both more noticeable. Anyway, like I've said a couple times, my point is not if you can make an osage warbow, it is that an osage warbow will not in anyway compare with a similar warbow of better wood choices, and is in no way the
"best" bow wood in every scenario. This was in response to all the people in this thread claiming osage is the utmost best bow wood period. I guess you are claiming that all bow woods perform exactly the same always as long as design is taken in mind and executed accordingly. To a small extent I agree, but to claim that this is always the case is an absolute in itself.
EDIT: Also, anyone who seriously shoots warbows of any significant weight typically does not shoot bows so short as 72". The couple more inches has a big effect on stack. Believe me or not. Or at the very least, I am sure they would rather shoot a 74" - 78" bow, especially if shooting for a long period of time.