DC, oh man. The pressure. Lol
Pat, to be clear I'm not discounting the word reflex. Reflex is a very useful word that does a good job of describing what it describes. Very necessary. It's also definitely related to the word I'm looking for. And I agree, sections of limb that remain concave on the back when braced are merely the sections of reflex which weren't pulled past straight. Absolutely.
However, because you can make different areas of a limb bend different amounts, the profile at brace can take on a quite different character from the unbraced profile. I could draw out another thought experiment showing how the same unbraced profile could bend to become very different bows at brace. Kind of the reverse of the A B C experiment I already drew. Unbraced, these bows would be exactly as reflexed as each other, and have that reflex in the exact same places. But bending from there, strong reflex can disappear. Or remain. Strong convexity can form where there was none before. Or not.
We don't need an extreme example like bow C to show that. Common bows show that. And because the geometry of the bow in use (between brace and full draw) is what matters most for its stability in use, and the profile's effect on f/d curves, and other such concerns, it seems useful to me to have a piece of vocabulary to make clear that you're talking about the shape of the bow while in use.
As it is now, the word "reflexed" doesn't work at all to describe the braced shape of certain reflexed bows, bow C being a good example. Or any reflexed longbow really. If I handed one to you as a mystery bow, strung, you'd never call it reflexed either. You wouldn't be able to tell it was reflexed. Even though it very much is. Without some fairly detailed science, you'd have to unstring it to know much about its reflex. This is true of all bows really. Braced geometry seems like a sufficiently distinct concept from "reflex" as people usually mean it. But to talk about it, I'm stuck with the super awkward "concavity/convexity of the back of the bow at brace". Can you think of a better way to convey the same info?
It seems to me that we could all talk about things in a clearer way if the terms reflex and deflex referred to the unbraced profile (as they usually do already) and we had different words that described a braced profile. Suddenly communication becomes easier.
As an anology, I think about our language for animals and food. We have the words cow, pig, and chicken, and then the words beef, pork, and poultry. Your view seems similar to someone arguing the we shouldn't have the words beef, pork, or poultry. Who needs em? But the specific words only serve to clarify, and take away nothing. When I say I got some pork at the store, you don't have to wonder if I have a new pet.
(Are you describing bow C as a deflex/reflex bow? I wouldn't agree with that.)
Badger, yes, exactly.