I really don't see any difference between a fibre glass recurve and what I was trying to create other than the materials and therefore limitations on geometry. For me the D/R is a recurve made of composite wood.
The 'D' is for deflex. Deflex is where the limbs sweep back from the handle area. The 'R' is for reflex. That is the limbs sweeping forward. The recurve is the tips being sharply bent forward. You can have any and all of these features by themselves or combined with the others. The fibreglass bow you are calling a 'recurve' bow is properly designated a deflex/reflex with recurved tips. The commercial designation of it as just a recurve is not really correct, but has become the default description of that type of bow.
Some pictures to illustrate.
1) A bow with only reflex. This was a flat pyramid bow that I heated reflex into on a form. There is no deflex off the handle and no recurved tips, the limbs simply bend forward from the fades:
2) A bow with reflex and recurved tips. No deflex off the handle, the limbs begin moving forward immediately after the fades:
3) The same bow after tillering. You can see almost all of the reflex has pulled out so it is now essentially a flat bow with recurved tips:
4) A bow with deflex out of the fades and reflexed limbs, but no recurved tips:
Mark