Justin, I think you are confusing the strength and elasticity terms. Just because wood is stronger in tension, does not mean the back is the 400lb wrestler. The wood has one elasticity, also known as stiffness. This stiffness is the same whether you stretch or compress it. Maybe I'm not understanding your point though, I'll think on it some more.
Marvin, I didn't say it was all that significant. But the Poisson Effect and possibly this other business I am describing is there and I'm simply pointing out that there are stresses on a bow limb that we don't always think about. Its kind of hard to measure things like cross-section of a bow at full draw, so we tend not to think there is anything going on.
Will you make a better bow, knowing these stresses exist? Heck I don't know. I do think it changes the argument for rectangular cross-section just a bit. That subject has been debated pretty heatedly in the recent past.
I agree that "plane" is misleading, in that it implies a flat 3D surface. Since the limb bends, the plane is curved. What I am not positive about, is whether the NP (neutral place?) is flat in 2 dimensions or is whatever shape is dictated by the cross-section.
Simon, I see what you're saying, it could be that this is the explanation. What would you call that? The edge is obviously moving to the point of least stress, and it is doing so in spite of the Poisson Effect tendency. So it must be stronger than this effect. I think it is possible to make a cross-section where there is no net movement.
This must be simple stuff to a physicist who has studied bending and the like. We aren't discovering some unknown property here.
Mims I felt like I needed to post everywhere, to get a few responses. I actually got more good input than I expected.