So are you guys planning on dispelling another old adage? Just started chasing the rings on my first piece of Osage last night (Thanks SteveB!) Rings are thin, and the early wood it very thin . Sounds like I have a good candidate on my hands! Thinner rings generally mean that a piece of wood has grown slower. Less water , nutrients, sunlight , but not always shorter growing season. In my experience with ring porous woods , the late wood on thinner ringed woods is usually significantly harder than it's faster growing neighbour. It really shows in species like red oak . The fat rings are generally quite soft and easily dented.
Does anyone have Data to back it up? This one might be hard to get scientific on, but I would think that a couple of samples of thick and thin ringed wood planed to a uniform thickness, width and length, would show us their merits with a bend test.
Excellent thread, Adam!