Thanks for the replies. I will dig through Blackhawk's posts, thanks Pat.
Darksoul, I know the Mol. and Hol. designs are considered different-but way back when I learned it was Holmegaard and I happen to like the name better, accuracy aside. Besides, I am a scientist by trade, I get enough of super specific jargon as it is. I have read a lot of the posts here and other places regarding the name change, and my personal opinion from looking at pieces of these bows is that they were really more like extremes of a design feature so interchanging the names isn't that big a deal-or at least that is what I tell myself so I can sleep at night. I will look for some of those posts, I seem to remember Half Eye was helping with the tillering or made one or two of them...but I don't remember who was really behind the experiment. I think they were also a bit shorter, which partly prompted my initial question.
And this wouldn't be my first of this design, just by far my longest-one of my favorite shooters is a 57" bow in hickory. In general my bows sit a little under 60", so around 70" seems huge...but something about the stave made me think that this is the design to go with.
Blackhawk-I was more curious what is known about the physics/efficiency type of characteristics that these bows have at longer lengths and how it translates to more 'standard' layouts. If it were just personal opinion I would shorten it a good deal, and with just shy of a 2.25" wide bit of hop hornbeam I am not too concerned about having enough wood. But thanks for the general ratios, I will take those under advisement. I was considering relexing the levers slightly as well, I will look for that bow. Is it posted here? Never mind, I see the link now.
Thanks again, SOM