I know there are a lot of variables that can tend toward chrysalling; species, individual trees, individual wood, the bow workmanship, etc.
But I was also wondering if in general, say a thinner wider bow section tends to fail by chrysalling more readily than a thicker narrower one? I mean if you could do longbow style and a broadbow style with the same wood and you overstressed both would the longbow tend to develop more set before chrysalling than the flatbow, or tend toward a tension break first compared to the flatbow (depending on the wood)?
I ask this because it seems like for example, a planed shaving from a piece of pine, bends to a crease (a fret ie. chrysalling massively) without breaking, while a thicker test piece will snap in tension. It seems to me that chrysalling may be at least partially related to the relative thickness of a piece.
And the reason that might be interesting is with a wood that tends toward chrysalling easily, would it be an advantage to consider a deeper section to get the best use out of it? Or is the opposite true?