Do you think a Medieval archer, who was depending on his life with the bow he carried, would have carried a 60 or 70# bow into battle?
Yep, and it was most likely done over and over again. - just look at the Nydam bows. Some have estimated them to be around 60-70#. That was 300 AD, but still.
I don't disagree that ~120# probably is the best estimate for the MR bows, but we can not be too sure. If we were to depend on replicas alone to estimate the draw weight, it would have to be a very broad estimate - probably from 60-200# at 32". But then again, what the bows will do with replica arrows, is probably the best scource of information on the draw weights. - on the other hand, as I said in my previous post, some of the largest bows may have been made that large because the stave was not as dense as the other staves.
So while shooting replicas might hint at draw weights over 100#, the reconstruction of replica bows from less dense yew might give us a hint that the extra large bows not necessarily were as powerful as they might look.
...after all, stories tend to make things bigger and bigger over the years... ...and longbows in Britain are probably not the exception, hehe...