Ok, would this be a fair test of the fabric backing?
1) Build a bow with a decent amount of strain to the limbs. For example, my 26" draw, 56" nock to nock with stiff handle of 4" and 1.5" fadeouts at approximately 45-50 lbs of draw weight. This comes out to less than the old "double your draw length plus 10%, therefore setting the limbs up to be stressed a bit more than normal.
2) Make the bow from hickory and make the limbs narrower than the accepted norm, again adding a slightly higher degree of strain to the back fibers, i.e. 1.5 inches at the fades vs the usual 1.75"
3) Chose a board that has a few grain runouts in mid limb, thereby encouraging limb failure to happen in a more predictable point.
4) Back with a light linen/canvas material and TBII
5) Given that a really crappy piece of wood is not a fair test On the other end of the spectrum, a flawless piece is not fair either. The idea is to figure on making the bow slightly less than the low end of acceptable. Ex: On a scale of 1-10, with 10's being guaranteed to shoot great and survive, a 1 failing at floor tiller, this bow would be a 4.
The plan would be to photo-document the process and then suit up in some borrowed armor from one of the local Society For Creative Anacronism nutjobs and overdrawing this thing back to my ear while asking forgiveness from the Bow Gods.
I think I have the 1x2, I know I have the 6 oz linen (gorgeous stuff imported from Russia, leftovers from making a nice Colonial shirt), TBII, and the tools. Just gonna have to see if I can make the time in my schedule.
Suggestions on how to modify this to be a fair test of the theory? After all, this is a good and proper smoke test, the idea is that the bow will be built to fail. Am I missing something, is there something to add, are there better criteria?
I'm not interested particularly in proving you wrong, Fiddler, any more than I wanna prove myself right. I want an answer that can be considered reliable.