Halfbow I want to agree with you . But I think this would be a overbuilt design. Pyramid bows will hold true to this till about mid limb. Then it needs to be pretty straight grain or you better be good at tiller. I haven’t built many recurves but reflex all my bows the last 8-10”. The best ones work 5-6 “ of the 8-10”. That’s when I do my part correctly. Just thoughts here guys . Arvin
Sure, I think we agree. My statement was just about the cross section of a limb at any given point. On most bows that cross section will change at different points on a limb. I wasn't suggesting a design, I was just saying the limb will be most stable where it's wider/thinner. Stability kind of matters less the farther out you are on the limb, so you can get away with more. Many bows even get narrower than they are thick at the tips. But if you tried to make a bow that was narrower than it is thick near the handle, you'd run in to problems.
But even toward the tips you have to think about it some. I've made a holmegaard style bow where I narrowed the tips too much, they were much thicker than they were wide, and they started to want to bend sideways. Oops. (Add the constraint of a bow string, and sideways bend shows up as twist and torsional instability)
I'll try and do a simple experiment tonight....So you are saying 2 bows with the same exact dimensions (width, thickness, length) will have the same torsional stability regardless of what they are made of? Ipe and pine? I don't think so.
Not exactly. I'm talking about ratios of width to thickness. So let's say a board of eastern red cedar that is 1.5" x .5", and a board of ipe that is .6" x .2" have the same stiffness. The same "draw weight", if you will. (I don't know what the real numbers would be, I'm just imagining) Both these boards are 3 times as wide as they are thick, and I'd imagine they'd both be quite torsionally stable as a bow.
Now if we imagine boards with a square cross section, say erc that's 1" x 1" vs ipe that's .3" x .3". If they have the same stiffness, I'd imagine they'd both be equally unstable.