Laburnum certainly is a very good an elastic bow wood. Iīve made a couple of laburnum bows and Iīm very happy with the results. Iīm using one bow since more then five years and I donīt feel that it has lost any cast since then. Iīve read about an 18th cenury botanist, who claimed that laburnum bows can be used up to 50 years - Iīll let you know about it in 45 years
I usually prefere laburnum bows with sapwood. They do look great and the sap wood is extremely good in tention - maybe a bit better then heartwood, but Iīm not sure. But the sap wood does rot very easily. I have some staves where the sap wood started to rot because the wood was covered with a canvas at first
The wood couldnīt breath enough. But still, I do have made a bow with sapwood out of one stave and it didnīt break, although there might be some fungus. Speaking about my other staves, I will definatelly remove the sap wood.
In order to see if it still works, you can remove a scale of the sapwood and see if it is still intact. If itīs elastic and tough, the bow will be ok. But you should definatelly remove the sapwood, if it is black, brittle or at least more brittle then the heart wood.
Will the rotten heart wood definatelly be in your bow?
lonbow