"Ya must've missed my last sentence George...judging by tension,compression,and elastic properties alone its number one,and that's what allows it to be smaller than other bows. Make those others the same dimension and try to get the same bend with them and see what happens. Are they equal now? "
Of course not, blackhawk. I said as much. I do love osage, too, but it doesn't grow on trees around here in the Granite State.
I wonder how osage would fare in a desert environment? I wonder if hickory would be far superior there? Now take that same hickory bow and bring it to FL. Rhetorical questions.
Availability and regional concerns are important.
A bowyer should not ever be past the point of design because that is the whole key to successful bowyering. That's where this discussion should end.
Those who like short bows should use osage. I don't like short bows because they stack badly and aren't good for my style of shooting. Give me a fairly long Eastern Woodland style bow and I'm happy.
Someone said above that the choice of bow wood is a really personal choice and I've made bows from many, many woods including yew, BL, white oak, red oak, elm, hop hornbeam, hickory, sassafras. maple, Aus. pine, chestnut, and osage. I think some others too.
The only thing I don't like about osage is it makes my workshop yellow.
Jawge