Lots of folks say you cannot make a narrow limbed bow of most whitewoods. I have never made a bow with limbs more than 1 1/2” wide and made many that are 1 1/4”-1 3/8” wide. These are all parallel limbed bows for 2/3 of their length or so and taper to 1/2” or so nocks most have been 60”-66” long. I have had a few compression failures but most has held up. I’m looking forward to looking over that info on SG and see how it comes out on some of the staves that I have that I know will produce a narrow limbed bow, or at least the split right next to it did. Another side of it is saplings. A good hunting weight bow can absolutely be made from a 2” diameter sapling. After you take the wood you need off to make that sapling a bow, you aren’t left with very wide limbs, but it works. I think there are a lot of variables, from crown, bow length, density, limb shape, and probably more. I don’t think I could make a whitewood pyramid bow starting out with 1 1/4 limbs, but it might be possible with the right piece of wood. Most everything I make is of hackberry or elm, with hackberry quality varies greatly from tree to tree. You can cut two trees that started as shoots from the same stump and they will be different, I don’t understand why.
In the end, if you want your best chance at a shooter, go with a wider limb. If you have plenty of wood and time, and you want a more narrow bow it is worth trying, just make sure you get a good dense piece to start with.