I am not a new bowyer, I have been makin self bows since the summer of 1989. Hundreds of bows to my credit. Several years ago I had an osage scrap, side split from a full grown stave if I remember right, setting in the corner I intended it for a kids bow. Any how I grabbed it and on a complete whim roughed it in floor tillered it then deflexed it through the handle alot about 4 in put a short recurve to the tips and sinewed it with TB III. I finished tillering it about a month later, put snake skins on the back, and shot it in. It pulls about 74# at 26 in, it is 54in ntn. I usually shoot really heavy arrows 800gr plus and this bow shot them ok but nothin to write home about. I had some birch shafts that finished out around 650gr I was going to use in Tx for hogs so I shot one of them, I about crapped myself.. That bow shot them soooo fast i could not believe it I took it on the hunt and killed 9 hogs using birch shafts and tusker 100 gr heads. Since that time I have made several bows using this principle including BBO and BBI. I have shot them through a chronograph and they do not stand out next to conventional straight, R/D, or sinewed recurves until arrow weight drops to below 10gr per pound then they blow the other bows away. I shoot bows in this weight 70 to 90 because I like them, I get to hunt dangerous game at least once a year so they give me pleasure. I want to be clear, the tips on this style of bow set behind the handle 2in to 4in when unstrung and very little movement is necessary to string the bow, the string angle is very low even at full draw. I do not want to get beat up for posting, I would like info if others are experimenting with this type of bow, or any physics majors have an explanation for why these bows perform so well for me. Thank you for your time.