I have been building BBO bows for quite a few years now. I have always used 1/4 sawn billets which are 36" long, 2" wide and at least 1/2" thick. I Z-splice them together for my stave. I have made some sweet bows over the years. Only have had 2 blow up on the tree from a complete Osage failure. Now in the past 2 weeks, I have had two bows made from 1/4 sawn Osage billets, throw up a very thin crack along the outside edge of the limb, about 12 inches in from the tip. Never had that happen before.
So my main question here is, is 1/4 sawn a good choice for BBO bows in a r/d design, or would flat sawn be a better choice. Sitting here thinking about this, seems to me that flat sawn might be a better choice over 1/4 sawn. Because when using 1/4 sawn, as you narrow the limbs from the flares out to the tips, you are cutting through every growth ring, leaving a possible weak spot along the edges of the limbs. Where as with flat sawn, you would have several consistent growth rings the whole width of the limb.
Did I make any sense? LOL