I have made a lot of bamboo backed bows, at least 50, back when I was selling bows that is what most people shooting tournaments wanted because of the increased performance. Back then they were allowed in the selfbow class, no so today.
If the bamboo was thick I would have what I called an osage belly bamboo bow, all of which were under performers because the bamboo was doing all the work and bamboo by itself is not a great bow wood/grass.
For me bamboo was merely a backing, a thin strip glued in a reflex and tillered to perfection made for a nice performer with "0" set if I glued in 2 1/2" of reflex on my form. I found a formula that worked for me, every one of my BBOs was exactly like all the the others.
One can argue about this and that as far different qualities of a bow components is concerned until you are blue in the face, neutral plane, compression resistance and all are not on my radar. I just make bows, and pretty good ones at that.
I do get a chuckle out of some of the "facts" put out here at times. The most recent one was a bunch of guys telling a newbie that his osage had too many run outs and even backed with bamboo it was sure to fail.
Well, well, I reserved my tight ring twisty osage for bamboo backed bows, and never had a failure, the bamboo did it's job.
Here is a typical example, this bow, or one just like it, won a national championship in the hands of a very skilled lady archer. It took about 10 years and hundreds of thousands of arrows before it lost tiller, got mushy and had to be was retired.