This sounds good. I'll break out the TBB and read your chapter, Again. Do you just use an average limb thickness to determine the different radii ( I don't think I've ever typed that word before
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No. That's actually the whole point. I hate dragging math into it, but......
Imagine taking some 2" wide boards and clamping them around a big curve, like say, a tractor tire. Let's say the boards are five feet long, and the tractor tire is also five feet in diameter. Ok? Now, lets say that one of these boards is a full inch thick, and the other board is 1/4" thick. On the tractor tire, the inch thick board is now scribing the arc of a circle and the diameter of that circle, on the belly would still be 60", BUT would be 62" on the back. The thinner board has a 60" diameter bend on the belly, but only ma 60.5 diameter inch circle on the back. So, 60:62 inch ratio for the thick board, and 60:60.5 inch ration on the thin one. Which one is under too much strain?
A certain thickness can only take a certain amount of bend. Badger says 1% difference between inside and outside curve. 1% of 60 is 0.6 inches, and 1% of 62 is 0.62, right? Thus, a 2" diameter difference is way too much, and you shouldn't try to bend a 1" thick piece into such a tight a circle. But, a 1/4" thick piece can tolerate it easily. My math is primitive, but it's for visualization.
So, we're back to "thinner wood can bend farther than thicker wood". I tend to more or less calculate this where I want the limbs to bend the most, and then fudge it up where the limbs need to be thicker.