The failure was due to the bolt!... else why did it happen exactly there?
Occams razor... the obvious is the most likely.
Del
Why would it delam after the limb was no longer supported? I still think it was the delam first. The rubber gasket is not a good idea. A soft surface in a structure that you're trying to make rigid is a poor recipe.
It would delam because the spilt has then allowed the part which is still held by the bolts to bend on a tight radius and delaminate... once it starts to delaminate it continues along the limb.
I'd suggest if the delamination started mid limb, the limb would loose all it's rigidity and no longer have the strength to cause the split.
There is no actual way of telling which came first.
I'm quite happy to be wrong, I'm just saying what I'd do*.
Note I said
thin rubber. I agree you don't want it to be able to move, but on the other hand you don't want it flexing up against a sharp edge.
Is any part of any bow is ever trully rigid...? (Answers of 500 words to "philosophy and bow design" department WPB... Del the Cat, Harlow UK....
)
Del
*As the old Irish joke goes:-
A driver pulls up at the road side to ask an old guy the way to Balally...
The old Irish guy looks at him, strokes his chin and replies.
"Ah, to be sure, If I was you I would start from here... "