The short answer to the OP is: you
can use the numbers, as long as you know what to look for, and know how to use them. Failing that, just try woods, or ask around.
DavidV,
The Modulus of Rupture is not the tension strength. It is the bending force required to cause the wood cells to rupture. Some woods will collapse on the belly before the back breaks. A wood that chrysals badly before the back comes apart has ruptured.
One reason many of the published numbers on woods are less than useful is because the tests the wood scientists conduct measure figures at failure, and not a sub-maximal loads such as we (almost always) make our bows to.
I've done a whole bunch of bend testing. Quite like Tim Baker's bend test but with more formulae that generate MoE/MoR/bend stress/strain etc. A few years ago I made a generalised statement that a bow made from a wood with 60% of the MoR as the bending stress would be close to correct. I sort of stand by that still, but there're heaps of exceptions. As a matter of fact, Elmer came to a similar conclusion early last century.
The reason Osage and Yew make such spectacular bows is not their stiffness or their MoR, but the amount of
strain those woods can take before taking set. Osage and Yew can often withstand about 1% strain before taking an unreasonable amount of set. Some woods I've tested (and made wuite good bows from) tested as only being able to withstand 0.78% strain before taking set.
By the by, strain is the percentage of elongation or compression at the surface of a bent beam.
Why is this ability to withstand strain good? If a wood can withstand more strain, it can be made thicker without taking excessive set. And/or can be bent further for the same sized limb. This makes for a more efficient use of wood, and is quite independent of the stiffness, and is also quite independent from MoR and crushing strength. It's fascinating that two different species might have exactly the same MoR and crushing strength, but have wildly different allowable strain values.
Now, some people rightly point out that all these numbers aren't important for making bows. To a very large extent they're correct. But working with the wood's numbers is something I enjoy quite a bit, and I've written a bit about it here:
http://www.ozbow.net/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=34&t=13765DavidV, it might be that bit that you find yourself disagreeing with.
Dave