I've never built a board bow before, because where I live is board desert and I have plenty of access to normal bow wood. About the only boards you can find around here are either fir (norway spruce), douglas fir (mostly only large beams) or meranti. But you can find straight ringed fir. So I stumbled upon an plank of 4.4 cm x 1.2 cm x 2.1 m and thought what the heck, let's just try this out.
Norway spruce is about the stiffest wood (and least elastic) for its mass (SG only 0.32!), only bested by sitka spruce and W Hemlock (which are a tiny bit denser). Not what you'd call ideal bow wood.
Shortened it to 66", glued a 7" handle + fades section (a slat of the same plank), and cut it into a pyramid shape (4.4 cm at fades to 1 cm nocks), gently heat treated the belly and voila! Level thickness of 1.2 cm throughout the limbs, automatically tillered.
Draws smoothly to 28" at 35#, has 3/4" of set after shooting and since it has virtually no mass (335 grams) it shoots without any hand shock and very true to the target. Speed isn't terrific, about 145 fps from a 370 gr arrow, but it's a sweet shooter for sure.
The pics here just show the rough bow, just testing if these boards could make an OK bow. Seems they do.