Hmm? How to say this modestly in humbleness?
I think its safe to say that I've played and experimented with the lever bow designs as much as anyone else in the last few years,and maybe in our modern times(last decade etc..),and trying to find the best way to execute them, and to tweak and perfect them to the highest levels possible with them...I've tried lots of different ratios of percentage of lever to working limb,countless wood species,boards,staves,laminates,stiff handles,bendy handles,really short lengths,super long lengths,straight levers,slightly reflexed levers,curved levers to full on big hooked static levers,straight working limbs,deflexed handle,R/D,etc etc...you name it and I've tried almost everything you can concoct and imagine,and configure into a lever style bow...and I still haven't quite come to a end all ends conclusion either with em(and never will either)...but I think I've gained enough ground to say I've got it narrowed down pretty good.
Here's a few of my favorites that not only just shoot fast,but also score very well in all the other categories of what makes a good bow a good bow(to me at least IMO)..which to me these days adds up more and is worth more than speed alone...notice the similarity in all of them.
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php?topic=42911.0http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,36920.0.htmlhttp://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php?topic=40916.0http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,38078.0.htmlWhere I'm at right now is that I like my lever to be around 33-40% of the length of my limb...it seems to be the "sweet spot"..and less and you don't get enough leverage dynamics,and anything longer seems to be like a 2 year old trying to swing a major league sluggers bat for a lack of better terminology...which in most bows ends up being 8-10" long or so on average...and I like the first couple inches of my levers to "give" at or near full draw..that way I still have leverage from them,AND they are as light as possible in mass...and reflexing or curving them helps "stiffen them"(meaning maybe a lighter lever yet) and when they give a lil they still maintain a better and lower string angle than a straight lever....the above bow links I posted all have a similar degree of curve as well...~35-45°...which is funny cus patm mentioned another's study finding the same results as my hillbilly bow making ways...also another thing is if the first couple inches give then only 6-8" are really stiff and also coincide as to what Marc mentions...and if done right you now have a really low mass outer half of your limbs..more so than a lot of other designs...and if done right this is why and how this design can really shine...but that's the hard part for 90% + of the folks I see out there trying to make them...like I said...it pretty much has more to to with the nut holding the drawknife...
Also to add onto what Steve said in incorporating the skinny stiff leverage tips into other designs really gives them leverage almost in the same way...I pretty much now incorporate that into a lot of my bows regardless if its a "molly" or not.
Ironically and funny enough is the similarity of some of my favorites to a Turkish horn bow...its almost like a self bow form of one ..meaning its a lil longer,slightly wider limbs,less setback limbs etc so that it survives as a bow because we know that unbacked wood can't take and match the elasticity limits of sinew and horn...and they also seem to be like a horn bow in that they tend to do better and shine brighter in heavier weights like over 50 pounds..although a lighter one will still do well enough,but it just seems like there is little difference between a 40 and 60 pound bows levers mass wise(even when both are made right),and we all know the 60 pounds is gonna throw that stiff armed lever harder than the 40 pound one...
OK..I'm outta wind...
End of chapter one!!!