I’m about to have a real good comparison for osage. I’m finishing a bow from an indiana tree that had phenomenal late to early wood ratio. The early layers are super thin, and the late rings are whoppers. So far (just put first shots thru it yesterday) it’s holding the vast majority of the reflex I added (had to remove reflex from one limb and reflexes to match the natural reflex of the other limb). I came in too light, so Im about to take an inch off each end to make bow 63.5” tip ti tip. Will add slightly more recurves and sinew backnit.
The second bow I have just about at floor tiller is an Ohio stave, and it’s early:late is not terrible, but definitely not as good as the first bow. It is already ~ 62.5” tip to tip. Limbs are slightly wider. At this time, this bow weighs less than the nearly finished first bow, so it is definitely less dense than the bow with thick growth rings. I’m going to recurve and back it with sinew also, so while theirs will be slight design differences, they will be very similar. The comparison will be interesting.
Im interested to see which one produces the better bow. I tend to think that the tighter ring staves will take less set than thick ringed staves. Why? Well, if set is caused my compression of belly cells, my theory is that before the cells of the thin late rings in the compression plane of the belly can compress snd become damaged, the compression forces are spread into the the early wood in that compression plane which is spongy and can “absorb” some of the compression load…providing a little buffer of protection for the late wood rings in the compression plane. I’m pretty sure that an unviolated thin back ring will withstand any normal draw applied tension, so unless the early wood layers are unusually thick, which might cause delamination toward the back, I’m leaning toward the tighter growth ring Osage producing better bows than fat growth ring Osage. I know for sure that if two identical bows were made from those two staves I have, with draw weight and profile being identical….the thin ring stave will out perform the thick ring one by a good bit simply due to how much lighter the wood is…less limb mass to move = faster.
That’s my theory, and I’m sticking with it till I prove myself wrong…which may be as early as the end of this week!
I’m