Mark if you read through this post he explains his foam theory http://leatherwall.bowsite.com/tf/lw/thread2.cfm?forum=23&threadid=188683&category=
Thanks for that, Tommy. I will go have a read.
EDIT - I have had a read through it. What Dan is talking about with his 'surface travel' concept is really strain as it is defined in mechanics of materials theory in engineering. His explanation is consistent with how Tim Baker describes Perry reflex in TBB V.3.
PatM, Dan's foam explanation holds up for all solid materials, including wood. It is basic mechanics of materials stuff combined with a bit of beam theory. Foam is used as the material because it will tolerate large enough strains for them to be seen by the naked eye, but all solid materials adhere to the same rules.
One thing I am wondering about is Dan describes using very thick pieces of wood for the belly lam, upwards of 3/4" thick for his bows. He also mentions that he likes to be close to finished dimensions when he does the glue up. I can't imagine having a finished bow be over 3/4" thick anywhere on the limb. What wood species and type of bow would that apply to? My last pyramid bow is made from hard maple, draws 40lb@28", the limbs are 2" wide at the fades and the finished thickness is around 0.385" at the fades. Doubling that thickness would make it 8 times stiffer for a draw weight of 320lb@28" (not that the maple would survive that). That seems crazy to me. Even if you halve the width to 1" that leaves you with a 160lb bow.
One thing that Dan seems to not understand is the idea of gluing two thinner lams into a deflex shape, then pulling that assembly into reflex during a second glue up with the backing lam. He says that wouldn't be the same as pulling a single piece belly lam into reflex as he does, when it actually would accomplish exactly the same thing. He seems to think that having a glue line in the first assembly somehow renders the response of the glued up pieces to be different than bending a single piece of wood. As long as the glue is as strong as the wood is (which is typically the case for the glues we use) then there is no difference in the end.
Mark