White woods are fine. Sounds like you are long on theory and terminology and short on experience. There is no need to try to attain too severe a reflex with wood.
but there is a reason isn't there. you want faster speeds, you need high early draw weight.
i think I'm being misunderstood here ngl.
forget reflex now:
think about this as Bow A and Bow B
Bow A is a normal bow with given thickness
Lets say Bow A pulls 50 pounds at 28 inches. alright now we reduce that thickness. now the bow A will pull like 35 pounds at 28 inches. lets call this new bow: bow B.
Ok. now lets think of bow A as being pulled from 6 inches of brace height to 28 inches.
And bow B, lets think of it working from 10 inches of brace height to 32 full draw rather than reflex because its pretty similar.
Sweet. now This bow B, pulled 32 inches back, should be under the same amount of stress as bow A pulled back 28 inches. please correct me if I am wrong.
we are not changing width or length here, only thickness.
again correct me if I'm wrong, but what determines a woods breaking point is its modulus of rupture.
hold up pause i just got a brain wave.
so is the reason why reflexes are under more stress because our back of a reflexed bow that is doing work is much thinner and therefore we have less volume of wood under the same amount of stress. because tension isn't spread across an area, its across the back of a bow which isn't just the back, its from the back to the middle of the thickness of the bow?? and now that volume is smaller because its thinner?