Steve,
I am trying to understand why you state that a bow’s performance would fall off beyond a 24” draw length? I could understand that this would be true if the bow is designed to the material limits for a 24” draw, but then drawn beyond this. It just means the bow design is not optimal for the longer draw length, correct?
There is something else that could come into play which may reduce efficiency which is not due to overstressing the materials. If the bow draw weight is light and the draw length is long, then this requires more working limb length. This reduces a bow limbs secondary natural frequencies which can rob efficiency. It is a similar issue low draw weight horn bows have compared to high draw weight horn bows.
Yet another reason this can occur is a shorter draw length has a proportionally better force-draw energy storage since it is less likely to stay out of the stack-zone, and the hump in the beginning of the force-draw curve takes up a bigger proportion of the whole.
The results of this test are also swayed heavily based on how the test arrow mass is adjusted for draw length too.
Alan