SCP, laying it out is where I feel like I failed. I was trying to condense it the best I could because it was too lengthy as it is. Each componet being measured requires almost a page of explanation.
Example. The first step is measuring the force draw curve of the bow. We all do this the same way. The fact is that if a bow with no hysterisis or very low hysterisis is measured it is pretty accurate, but if a bow has hysterisis it is a false measurement because we can't measure a force draw fast enough to keep up with the hysterisis factor. So all we get is a measure of how much work we are doing, it has very little relation to how much potential energy we actually have. This is the starting point for all the testing so if we don't find a more accurate method here everything downhill from this measurement is junk. Not having gone to school for any of this stuff I don't have the right terms to use. But starting at this point in the begaining if we don't identify the actual force going back into the arrow it will get lumped in with the virtual mass and thow everything else off.
Pat, the bows you are talking about doing so well are indeed low in hysterisis. The builder has no need to know anything about hysterisis if he knows what a good bow feels like. Successful flight shooters in the past were very aware of avoiding breaking down their bows. What I am talking about here in my thread is only useful for developing strategies to build bows, it just offers a way to prove certain theories that have been floating around for the past few hundred years.
The current record holding bows in the 50# class were all shooting in the high 220's maybe low 230's. We have bows now that are shooting in the high 250's and low 260's. Only because more attention was paid to hysterisis. Once I get the proper arrows to match thse bows I can back that claim up. The 50# records should all be over 400 yards , at present none of them are.