Awesome thread! I am new to bow building...I am a high school physics teacher and am exploring a completely different approach to analyzing and predicting breaking points of bows...one thing that many people have already noticed is width of bows...well, it turns out, that a bow limb acts like a cantilever beam (for fixed handle bows--not working the d bows yet) so I looked up some engineering equations...again, something you all know but I had to find out--cross-sectional area is by far the biggest indicator of breaking. Now people on this board also know that depth, from back to belly, is a bigger driver than width. That comes from the equation for the moment of inertia of a beam...1/8 of an inch removed from the belly can have DRAMATIC impact on draw strength!
But you all know that, I am learning that stuff. I am currently developing a MS Excel tool to help predict breaking points...it's been a challenge! I haven't written a calculus statement in ages!
Another interesting thing I've read on these board--tension/ tensile/compression of a wood. Well, there's a thing called Young's Modulus or Young's Elasticity--you can look 'em up per type of wood. Hickory is 1.4-1.56 Giga-Pascals....
Since I have no experience with making a bow other than breaking my first 4 (I'm on # 5 now) I have to go the physics teacher/ engineer geek route...sorry
There's another interesting thing...a limb that bends like a parabola or one that bends like an ellipse--very very different!
I'll keep ya posted on how that spreadsheet is coming along...
Cheers!
Brian