Didn't we decide that you can't get part of a limb to bend first? More or less, yes but not first or last. If you take any snape limb and move the tip 1/4" the inner part of the limb will move, maybe not much but it will move. Like the Parsons carriage.
I haven't abandoned the thought because I simply haven't fount a convincing reason to doubt it. Perhaps instead if saying "bending first" if i were to say, bending faster in terms of release, that could get you closer to my side of the fence? If an arrow relieving a stiff kick in the rear by way of string release will cause the arrow to flex, setting up a wave, then the same logic should apply to the bows limbs. When the arrow is shot, the nock moves either first or faster than the point, i cant say which, causing the arrow to bend until the tip catches up in speed with the nock. I feel strongly this same principle can me made to apply to a bows limbs and do my best to tiller with that in mind.
Id love to be prove wrong, because if so, that means I became more knowledgeable than I am right now as I sit thinking over a bowl of oatmeal. But as I currently sit, I just can't convince myself that it doesn't work that way. This may just continue to be a case where you and I must agree to disagree, and thats ok. Id like to get acess to a super slow mo camera as mentioned to prove this theory, which at this point, is all it is.