Marc I did, but that was very special ash, and perhaps one in thousand ash planks does for bows that heavy as I made. It should be noted that those very also very shallow in profile.
What I suspect with hickory bow in this weight and construction is that it will be pretty much unbreakable, but also sluggish and shocky, with ammount of set, we dont usually consider normal.
But maybe not if you make it, since you tiler better than most people on archery boards anyway.
Ian, I havent tried the sapelle, but I have seen sapele bow of 70# and it looked like the belly was going to be inevitably crushed.
If you only have hickory, then cut a backing strip and cut thickness taper on belly and reglue together on some simple former to get like 1 1/2" of reflex in outer limbs. That might help you offset negatives I mentioned. If you cannot get Ipe, try at least bulletwood (massarundaba), even though it is not that good, it is still better than sapelle.
Having no yew (almost) me and lads around here have made some seriously heavy bows out of hornbeam - that is european hornbeam and I suspect that it is closest to hickory we have, though not so hard. Dogwood bows of 100# shoot pretty well, the only trouble is pin fretting should the pin cross the belly from side.
What I m trying to tell you that once you venture into the 140# your wood choices are going to be more and more limited.
Jaroslav