The change in direction of pull around the 90 degree mark doesn't change very quickly.
E.G The component of the force that is trying to stretch the limb rather than pull it back increases once you get past 90... but it only increases slowly at first.
It's a bit like how the length of daylight change noticeably at this time of year (spring/autumn), but you don't notice it much at midsummer or midwinter solstice. (All to do with geometry of a circle)
What I'm really saying is that you have to be noticeably past 90 for it to show up. (Or do we... let's look at the maths)
If you want the arithmetic/geometry I recon it's a reasonable approximation to the cosine of the angle.
So at 90 there is zero force inline with the tip (cos 90 degrees=0)
At 95 (cos 90=0.87) there is 0.087 x the draw weight. so at 50# about 4.5# is pulling along the limb, so I s'pose we'd certainly feel that
At 100 it would be about 8.7#
Oooh that's quite a lot... maybe my first assertion is wrong
To me the question is how do we measure the angle?... the string is a nice straight line...but the limb? Do we measure to a line corresponding to the last 3" of limb? Or maybe a line from mid limb to tip? If we took a line from grip to tip, then a flipped tip wouldn't make any difference
. Dunno if there is even a proper answer?
Del