So, my copy of "Archery The Technical Side" just came in, and in a 1932 article by Paul E. Klopsteg, he gives his research for what he calls a "high efficiency, rectangular section bow." He goes on to say: "Reviewing the characteristics of the new type of bow, we may recall that its limbs bend in true circular arcs, with uniform stress throughout; that the limbs return from the drawn to the braced position in shorter time than do the limbs of any other shape about which we have information; that there is less wood in the limbs than in a corresponding bow of conventional limb section. The fiber stresses, i.e., the tensile and compressive forces to which the limbs are subjected, in a given weight bow of the new form, are less than in a corresponding bow of the conventional type, which permits the new bow to be made shorter if the archer wishes to have it so."
Also interesting to note were the experiments done to prove that narrow, light nocks are no faster than heavy, fat nocks. There were no appreciable differences in arrow velocity by having narrow, light nocks. (gasp! blasphemy!)
The book goes on to use math to prove the point, but I wanted to put this out there for review by those who know a LOT more about bows than I do. What's your practical experience with a bow like this?