Great article Badger. Entertaining reading.
A few years ago I was almost exclusively making bamboo backed bows from a select few of our Australian woods, mostly Ironbark and Spotted gum. I found these woods were sometimes tension weak, which is to say they could be described as brittle. However their set-taking properties were pretty good, and the stiffness was off the charts. I mean, it would leave Hickory for dead.
So the way to overcome the tension weakness is of course to put something more tension strong on the back.
So anyway after a few bows I settled on two designs. A longbow about 68-70" ntn, from which I could get 1.5 lb per mm of width at the handle. The other was a flatbow about 66-68" long, and increasingly the handle riser got thinner and thinner so that every ounce of wood was doing some work.
Funny thing is the limb width taper on these were very similar to each other, and quite similar to yours: for just over 3/4 of limb length they were almost parallel, tapering possibly to 4/5 of original width over that length. After that it would taper in convex bulges to narrow tips, that got narrower as more bows got made.
These bows got to be very fast. I didn't have a chrono at that point, but as you said above, they were performing similarly to a glass bow a friend would bring over to shoot of similar length/draw specs.
Lately I'm making Red Oak bows, and am finding a slightly modified pyramid design to be working really well. Mainly for economy of time, but the performance aint too bad either. Not modified much, just a little. I recently made one that drew 37lb @ 26", which shot 13gpp 139fps. Not mind blowing, but for the slightly shortened draw and heavier arrow, I think that's nothing to be ashamed of.
Keep it coming Badger, I'm eager to learn more.