I'm going to relist the woods suggested earlier:
Yew, Osage, Ipe, Black Locust, Plum, Juniper/ERC, Incense Ceder, Black Cherry, Padauk, Mulberry.
(Sorry SpringBuck, I didn't include your long list of exotic woods. I also didn't include very hard to come by, unfamiliar exotic woods in the following list either).
I also am going to propose some potential candidates for good compression woods based off my research from the wood database. They are:
Wenge, Olive, Lemonwood, Hickory, Dogwood, Indian Rosewood, Turkey Oak, Chinaberry, Muninga, Hophornbeam/European Hornbeam, Black Walnut/English Walnut, Blue Ash, American Beech, Yellow Birch, and Slash Pine.
Do any of you have it on good wisdom that any of these woods would make a bad compression wood for bows?
Some time ago, I did an attempt at deducing bow wood properties (tension and compression) from the wood database. See this post (and especially the graphs added) http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,50571.msg692147.html#msg692147
Meanwhile, I expanded the list (and figures) to some 100 wood species, and also compiled data for other materials such as bamboo, silk, horn, sinew, flax, jute, sisal, cotton, dacron, steel, ... even fibergl*ss)
Do take this with a good grain of salt (as the primary data may be a bit iffy at times with very limited tests per species, or strongly depending on test conditions such as wood MC), and remember (otherwise Jim Davis will correct me on this): the test on osage was done on green specimens and extrapolated to seasoned wood. So it likely represents an underestimation of its true properties.
But I fully concur with Springbuck: any wood can give good bows, but design (not osage) is king. I once made a shooter out of a board of scots pine at 0.35 SG...
Joachim
I was literally making a spreadsheet when you posted this haha. Thats cool man I'm going to have to look it over. I noticed that you have a "compression before set" value. How did you get that value, since the wood database doesn't have a measurement for it? Did you use the crushing strength value? When I was coming up with that list above I took into consideration the max crushing value, the ratio of MOR/MOE, as well as a new ratio of crushing strength/MOE. The last value isn't a real value but an arbitrary one I came up with, since the wood database doesn't specify a stress modulus of elasticity, wood would not have the same value like most materials. But I figured it would be somewhat proportional. To be considered the list the wood had to score high in all three areas (CS, MOR/MOE, and CS/MOE).