In the picture below is a cross section of the bow. figure B. (in mm.)
As you can see, the belly is nearly flat.
In a 'normal' flatbow (figure 'A') the dark zone in the belly is taking the pressure. My consideration was, to prevent set, one should not reduce this area.
Previous tests did show that there is no flattening out. Moreover, a hollow back tries to curl up. (Untill severe bending forces it to flatten out...very suddenly and with a lot of noise and splinters. But that is far beyond draw length.)
And no flattening out means that there will not be an escape for the pressure like in, for instance, a HLD. So I wanted the belly to be able to take the full load and, on the other hand, the idea was to save mass.
So it became a flat but thin belly. A little less than half the thickness of a normal flatbow, because the outer fibers are doing most of the work. The belly is about 5 mm thick. I hope this thin strip also allows the limb to do some curling and to get rid of the forces involved with that.
No flattening out also means that the ridges on the back need to take the tension all the way. Tests show that reducing these edges too much brings the bow in great danger. I see them as two cables, under high tension, which are holding everything together. If the limb is bending these cables want to get in horizontal line with the belly. But the curling up effect and the high tension gives them no room to move sideways. I made them about 10 mm wide on top and they seem to hold up.
The result is a kind of U-profile. Well known to cunstrutors, engineers, architects and construction workers!
No flattening out would also mean that there will be no extra smooth draw. Moreover, curling up would possibly mean that the draw is more tough. I think this is the case.