I've been thinking quite a lot lately about the weight of the tips on my latest bow. It's just a simple Ash backed Ash r/d, but I had a bit of an accident on the belt sander that's caused my tips to be unusually large. This caused me to worry about them maybe being too heavy for a fast arrow flight, but then I had a brainwave...
Through momentum, would the tips not cancel out the weight by causing the bowstring to tighten more on release, thus ejecting the arrow at a greater speed than light limbs?
Of course the vice versa of this theory would be that the lighter limb tips will enable the limbs to travel much faster, but with less momentum the string will not be as taught at the end of the limb's travel and the tips would bounce back to relaxed position much earlier on.
If this is confusing let me know and I'll try to word it a bit differently, but hopefully someone'll understand my babbling and give me a little more insight into any previous experiments (I don't have any of the high speed equipment to measure it) or theories that have proved/disproved this theory.
Anthony