I forgot to mention; the bow is bamboo backed osage board, 4" "z" spliced in handle, 1" wide, 6" handle area, 66" nock to nock, 45# @ 28". It took minimum follow as well, maybe 1" at the most. I've made dozens of these and this one's about the best so far.
I got the stuff from cali bamboo, 2" wide strips, 6' long, 25 slats fro $100. It was all very pristine, with few tool marks/defect on the rind. The shipping was $30 or so. I've also gotten boo from rattan and bamboo works that wasn't quite as well handled as this, but they're still good too. Their's is tiawan 'boo I think.
As for testing, Jim, I went through the same tillering proceedures as I always do, (scrape, brace with long string, draw to 1# less than desired draw weight, once I get within 3 inches of the draw length, I go to a standard string, and do the same thing, and repeat until I got 45# @ 28" with a 6" brace ht. ) I sanded down so I saw no tool marks, strung it up, got a 6" brace ht. and took it out and shot it. It performs as well as any other boo backed bow as I've ever made. I don't have a chronograph but I was shooting it at 30 yrds with a 500 gr arrow and the cast was fast enough and plenty flat to see it performs good.
The thing I see that's an improvment over the other breeds I've used, is the fact that in it's entire length it only has 4 nodes. Granted the nodes themselves are tough, but the places on each side of the nodes are a little weaker than the rest of it. I've used some with nodes 9 inches apart and had 7 nodes on the back, and for me the less the better.