Since this topic is about bamboo breaking, I figure I'll mention my issues with it.
I've tried a few different bamboo shafts, I won't go in to supplier details for obvious reasons. They do great when we actually have humidity. I live at 7500 feet in New Mexico and our normal humidity levels are extremely low most of the year, below 10% a lot....combine the elevation and lower vapor pressure, its sort of like a wood freeze deyer up here.
We had an unusually wet summer in 2019. I shot the heck out of my bamboo arrows. Shot a bunch of 3D, had many misses and didn't break a single shaft. Bounced them off of trees, hit rocks, etc. Then the weather dried out. And now any deflection off of a tree or stump shatters the bamboo. Rocks are instant death. My douglas fir shafts suffer from the same fate.
My moisture meter regularly reads wood here at sub 5%, not just on the outside mind you, but even after freshly cutting in to it, so I have to assume my arrows would have a similar moisture content.
I'm in the process of throwing in the towel and eyeballing carbon at this point.
I throw this out there just as a suggestion for Todd to take environmental factors in to consideration as you analyze breakage.