Ryan, I believe you are right. Thin ringed Osage consistently outperforms thick ringed Osage. I have only my observations to go by, and others who have observed the same. Thin ringed staves take less set and they are lighter. I assume the lighter early wood accounts for its lesser physical weight. That would make sense. But it seems to also have more elasticity than thick rings. I can’t say why, but what you put forward is worthy of consideration, though I think it is more than that. I am no engineer, but I read a lot and I take an interest in varied things. My knowledge about most things is a mile wide, and a foot deep, admittedly. I recall reading something some time back, that struck me as odd, but perhaps relevant to what we are kicking around. Badly paraphrasing…when you take a weak metal, and sandwich it between 2 stronger metals, the weaker metal takes on the strength of the stronger, reducing the weight without sacrificing the strength. I wonder if something similar could be true for early wood sandwiched between 2 hardwood rings. Again, only a thought, but, I am curious if there is anything to this.