RyanY,
Yes, you got it.
There is a second material property that you hint at in your last paragraph which drives the design of the bows. This is the maximum bending stress that the material can handle before it takes on significant set or permanent damage, and I am working on that next. It may require trying a few things, but the basic process is adding increasing bending loads until the sample doesn’t quite snap back to its original shape once the load is removed. This will give a yield stress value for the wood. If this is known, than we can really start to have some fun.
There are a couple of things that can complicate this. One possible issue is that pesky viscoelastic behavior that Willie posted about earlier. This is where a material takes a temporary set or relaxes under load, but it gradually recovers after a short time with no apparent permanent damage. I think the horn will be most affected by this. The other issue is finding a best method to measure and model this viscoelastic effect. The wood samples will show some of this also. It may turn out that it is best to stay below the stress levels before there is any significant viscoelastic behavior because this contributes to hysteresis losses.
Alan