Scp, I'm just a redneck off a dirt farm in the mountains, and I'm as dumb as a sack full of rocks; but after reading Steve's chapter about the mass principal, I can understand it enough to apply it to what little I already know and make better bows as a result. I'll never be able to make bows like Steve, Marc, or some of the other bowyers here, but if I listen to them instead of argue with them, I learn, and can see results of that in my own work. One thing I have learned from hanging around here for years, also, is something that you don't seem to have grasped yet-let's call it the "wooden bow principal." In it's simplest form, it states that each piece of wood is a unique entity. Coming from a living tree, it has its own unique character and characteristics, unlike a sample of fiberglass or carbon fiber, which is pretty much standardized and consistant with any other sample manufactured to the same specifications. Therein lies the interest, challenge, and joy of building wooden bows. If you want a set formula that will allow you to build a completely predictable bow to pre-set measurements every time, get you some fiberglass lams and a calculator. Maybe building wooden bows isn't your thing. If you want to experience the challenge of working with the individual personality of the piece of wood you're working on at the moment; and try to get the best bow from it you can, then you have to accept this fact: wood isn't wood isn't wood. Steve's mass principal, when combined with a certain amount of experience and a desire to learn from and listen to the wood, is a very useful tool for making a better bow. It is not a machine that works by itself, it still requires a bowyer to operate it. Start with the ideal design for your wood, then work with it within the limitations of your particular piece of wood. There may be a knot here, a place there where a woodpecker pecked the wood, the grain may swirl, there may be a spot where the growth rings crown up or dish in. These anomalies can't be answered by mathematics, only by experience, feel, and attention. This is the very thing that attracts many of us to building wooden bows-the challenge of making them, the process of learning to read and feel wood, and the uniqueness of the finished product. This is the very thing you seem to not want to accept. It's a simple concept. It's not all quantifiable or measureable, there are too many variables. But-it can be predicted to a certain extent, which is what Steve's principlal does as well as any other method could. The rest relies on your skill as a bowyer, there's no way to get around that. Steve's theory seems sound to me, and seems simple to understand if you've built some bows. After the dozens you say you've built, you should already understand this and accept it instead of try to argue about it. I'm not very scientific at alll when I make a bow. Like Eddie, I have never weighed a bow while I was making it-but the better performing ones I have made, when weighed tend to agree in mass with Steve's ideas.