my bad del, i was thinking backwards. you are correct. I was thinking that if i relaxed it to 28, it would make a different circle (which it would) but with a larger radius, not a smaller one (which was what i had in my imagination). As you said, that would put the nock even further from the center of the circle. Duh
Slim/Del: My thoughts were along these lines (mechanically speaking from a stress/strain point of view): if you have parallel limbs that taper in thickness gradually, then the percentage of wood removed per inch to create the taper INCREASES as you move toward the tip (and as we know, changing the thickness a certain percentage has a much larger effect on resistance to bending than changing the width). This would seem to dictate that if you measured the amount of bend at each inch of the limb, it would INCREASE as you move from fade to the tips. This would create an elongated ellipse (ie not a circle). With a constant width taper from fades to tips and uniform thickness, the change in width being constant creates a constant/uniform change in resistance per inch of limb toward the tips. That would seem to dictate a constant angle of deflection per inch (as opposed to increasing as parallel limbs do) which creates a CIRCLE (ellipse with both foci at the same point... the center). i havent read Steve's chapter on the mass principle in a while, so i don't know how well this ties in.
I know this is oversimplified, I haven't even considered in this the leverage that each inch of limb exerts on the one before it (from fades to tips) also increases, which may completely negate all of what i said. Nor have I included what may happen if you have a width AND thickness taper at the same time
All that put aside, if your limbs bend evenly without stiff spots or hinges, and fling an arrow, then you have a bow. Maybe even a good one. The rest i think is performance/comfort oriented (which i think is what you were discussing in your previous post, Slimbob), and maybe longevity as well.
Jawge: There is a tiny hint of stack the last inch or so, but it aint bad. At 28" the angle is still well under 90 degrees. I've put some arrows through, and at the right brace height she feels really good. Not jarring or anything. She she seems really fast too, well shooting across the garage anywho
Gonna take her for a spin in the back yard in a bit.
Appreciate ya'lls discussion on this. I think we often do confuse things by not being real consistent or even accurate with the terms we're using.
BTW Del: don't some of those short horse bows (mongolian and such w/siyahs) end up with a tiller that is an elongated ellipse with the major axis running along the arrow?