Alright here's mkII. It may not look like much, but this was quite difficult to arrive at. Playing around with design becomes a real pain when you have an end goal as precise as straight limbs at full draw.
Fair warning, skip the next 3 paragraphs if you don't care about fiddly details. Here's my thought process:
My first thought for how to increase stability was to get the string contacting the outer limbs at brace. Where the string contacts the limb is mostly taken out of the stability equation, and the bow behaves like a shorter bow until the string gets lifted off the limb during draw.
But I also knew I wanted to the limbs to be straight at full draw. It's not especially easy to achieve both these things. If I had just made the limbs more dramatically curved at brace, I could've gotten good string contact, but then the brace height would get too low. This meant I had to increase the deflex at the handle, as this way the limbs are angled more directly toward the string and can contact it sooner. But that meant I had to make the bow shorter. If I didn't, the limbs wouldn't bend far enough to be straight at full draw. So the challenge was to deflex the handle enough to get good string contact while maintaining brace height while avoiding making the bow absurdly short.
After I got the string to contact the outer limbs, I started to worry about efficiency losses there. The string doesn't have much leverage on the limb when it's right up against it. With it contacting so much of the limb, that could turn in to a real problem. When shooting, after releasing, when the bow hit brace, the string wouldn't have enough leverage to stop those outer limbs. They'd just continue moving forward past brace position, violently stretching the string. A lot of energy would go in to the bow instead of the arrow. To deal with this, I added some string bridges along the outer limbs. This is kind of like thickening the outer limbs. They'll be much far stiffer for the price of the minimal mass of the bridges. They give the string much better leverage over the limb. They also offered the benefit of lengthening the string and raising the brace height. This longer string meant I had to lengthen the limbs, or the draw length would be too long, which meant I had to decrease the deflex in the handle, which was convenient because I now had some extra room to do so thanks to the extra brace height. So adding string bridges caused a slightly longer and less deflexed bow, which is what I was wanting. Thanks string bridges.
With it on top of my old design, you can see how much shorter it is. You can also see it's suffered a significant downgrade to the string angle at the fingers. But on the other hand, we've added the benefits of less mass from shorter limbs, and the string let off. The string coming off the bridges during the draw should fatten the f/d curve.
I'm honestly not sure which of those 2 bows to expect to be better performance-wise. I think that string angle is really important, but the little bow has strong advantages on its side too. I want to experiment. But, I am at least pretty confident this new bow is more stable.
I drew in quite a lot of unbraced reflex again. But note that that is the easiest part of the design to change. It's basically the only thing you can change without throwing everything else in to disarray. So if it's too much reflex for you or your materials, you can just lessen it. Unbend those working areas a bit. If you went far enough unbending them, you could even make this bow have the same braced and unbraced profile. Get that slack string, if that's what you're in to.
Note that with a bow this short, I think wood would have a hard time even without the extreme unbraced reflex. I think we are in horn/sinew or modern material land here. ..But possibly a modified version of this design could be a wooden paddle bow?
But that said, I think this odd short little guy would be good. Excellent string angles for its length, light limbs (especially if you keep a lot of unbraced reflex), fat f/d curve, and more stable than my previous design. It would need a hefty string though.
Tell me what I'm missing guys.
P.S. Yes, I know the handle is a pinnacle of ergonomics.