Don't get me wrong huisme, the results from such a test will be interesting and I will be following to see the results if you pursue this. The point I am making doesn't change as a result of my admitted curiosity. Is this information new? Will it translate into building better bows? I am recovering from a long love/hate relationship with Black Cherry. Well, actually I was in love with the idea of loving Black Cherry. This infatuation was based on some of the engineering values associated with it, and some of the things Tim Baker had written about it. After multiple runs at building my "dream bow" from BC, and ending up with nothing remarkable at all, I realized that yes, I can build a bow from BC if I build it the way BC bows need to be built. The low hysteresis values were of little value in the real world, as you had to modify the design to compensate for its brittle nature. You compensate for it and end up with a bow that performs like all the other bows from all the other woods. Each having their own compensating factors. Some were dogs that just didn't perform, some were exceptional, and most were somewhere in the middle, regardless of any engineering value. A simple bend test on each piece of wood, for me anyway, tells me what I need to know about THAT piece of wood.