If your wood has thin rings then that can be problematic for the back.
All of the best Elm I ever cut had uniform rings, although this did not necessarily hold true throughout. Some trees that I cut had rings that varied from thin at one point to thick further down the tree. This was usually still good wood just not as good as trees with uniform rings. I never knew if the wood I cut was very good wood or just good until I made a bow with it, sometime it would even turn out to be crap wood. The conclusion I came to years ago is that not all Elm are equal and the good ones are few and far between, unlike HHB where it is rare for a tree to be poor bow-wood