If you subscribe to Klopsteg’s ideas on a convex limb width taper for an even thickness bow with even strain along the limb and circular tiller, pyramid bows would most often be overbuilt in the inner and outer limb and underbuilt mid limb where the straight taper would match a convex taper causing an area of higher strain.
Any links to Klopsteg's stuff?
Regarding convex limb width taper, David Dewey's spreadsheet outputs this shape for a constant thickness limb that tapers to a point at the nock, which is the classic theoretical pyramid design. If you analyze a straight taper pyramid on the spreadsheet it does indeed give higher strains in the mid-limb area. This correlated well with a straight taper maple pyramid bow I did last year (designed on the spreadsheet) where much of the set happened in the same mid-limb area.
My current bow project is a 3 lam red oak bow using the convex shape directly from Dewey's spreadsheet. It is tillered and ready for some test shooting but I have been swamped with a house move and setting up my shop before winter arrives tomorrow afternoon so it remains untested at this point.
Picture of the back shape after being cut on the bandsaw:
Drawn to near full draw on the tree:
Mark