I may be lacking in serious bow physics ( as did all primitive cultures who used the bow ) but regardless , I do find lots of oil extends the life of a bow . So I do it because it works . Simple is better . I even have a video on my youtube channel of a firekilled ironwood bow that survived over a month exposed in the open because of the oil treatments . It's still sluggish , but in the end of the day it makes meat . But in my opinion , this is EXACTLY why I back ANY bow that I can , OR build the limbs wide . I don't build bows for speed , power , or cosmetic look . I simply build them for what they were orginally created for- hunting . Because you can spend 30 hours making a perfect bow that shoots 170 FPS , draw it back , and break it . Or spend 10 hours making a trully primitive bow that shoots 120 FPS and drive an arrow through big game at 10 yards . I know our ancestors didn't give a damn about looks . Function equated to survival .
So with that said , I wouldn't dig too deep in science with something so primitive . Hell , even tape measures and blueprint designs will stir your head up and make you think too much . Don't give up on mulberry . It works . It bends , and shoots . Thier will always be failure with even the most carefully designed project . It's a fluke . And most the guys agree here that it was a tension failure from very low moisture . So ? Don't overheat . Substitute low MC with grease or water . They both work .