I wanna jump in this, having never even considered building a mollie. I have a question. If one lever is tillered so that it is exactly stiff, and another is tillered to bend only one millimeter, which will shoot further? Now this question as it stands is not answerable because we dont know how much the stiff lever weighs. But lets assume if another 60 gr ( to use a number used earlier in this thread ) were removed it would flex 1 millimeter.
I am willing to bet ( with no experience to back this ) that they would perform the same. Or at least without an exact shooting style and release every time, you would never tell a difference. That being the case, is there anything wrong with the argument Ryoon is offering? Seems as though Blackhawk has found a way to split that hair with his bows, but I would put him in a completely different classification of bowyers. So, sorry bud, you dont count
For the rest of us, how would a person know when his levers are reduced to max efficiency mass?
Perhaps if two bows were built? But no two bits of wood are the same. If one bow was built and the tips were reduced, weighed for mass, measured for amount of stifness, shot through a crono, and repeated until the speed numbers start to fall. That graph would be imposable to argue with.