What surprises me is how they both bend so much in the handle.
Thanks, Del. Jawge
I think this is both a function of ACTUALLY bending (slightly) in the handle, and (with actual bows that have fades) it APPEARING to bend more in the handle, because the transition from fade to limb thickness is rather sudden for a pyramid bow.
Knoll: I did this same test myself years ago (never posted, ADHD prevents me from taking pictures and then getting around to putting them up) but with thin pine slats, oak scantlings, and some 1/4" thick belly lams that hadn't worked out. With wood of uniform dimensions, the result is almost exactly the same. TINY differences, not big ones. With crowned staves, any amount of crown, to me THAT seems to make a difference, at least enough to require some care in tillering.
George, like I mentioned above, when this was discussed in depth on Paleoplanet a few years ago, I realized that both my pyramids and many I was seeing made, weren't really arc of the circle, exactly. It was more parabolic, bending less off the fades, and less at the tips, almost like tangents to the arc.
I also have a hypothesis, that with a pyramid bow, there is an exact right bow length for each draw length, because the string angle exerts pressure at different angles thoughout the draw. It seems to me there must be an optimum spot/angle/drawlength to stop, and that we should be designing the bows (length, primarily, to accomodate this.
Somebody on pg 2 wondered if tests have been done to see if limb strain is consistent all along the limb. The answer is yes. The nature of the bend itself shows engineers that the strain is consistent. Same thickness, bend to same arc= consistent strain, (but more pressure, as leverage applied to any one spot is greater the closer you get to the handle.