A large recurve that stores a ton of energy without degrading wood and causing set and degradation, yet somehow miraculously maintains efficiency through light weight and high stability is essentially one of the Holy Grails of bow design.
Small, radiused recurves go on nice wide, straight limbed (otherwise) shorter bows. Larger, sweeping recurves belong on deflexed staves and glued up deflexed handles. I like a parabolic curve with working reflex below a sharper, static recurve. in wood, not much else will work.
The R/D bow is partly popular because it melds low strain with high energy storage, but allows stable, stiff tips. Toss in Perry reflexing and flexible wood combinations and you got a winner.