"New bow design somewhat.67” ntn,9” handle, 1-1/8 at fades, 9/32 at tip, pyramid. Trapped on the back3/8 total. Pretty much the whole limb.3/16” on each side."
That's not really precise enough to use for calculations. When I shape my bow limbs I measure with vernier calipers to get everything as close as I can.
Back in 2007 Badger did a red oak board bow challenge. David Dewey made the only entry, designed using his spreadsheet. This thread talks about it and post #11 shows details of how he made the bow, with pictures. That's the level of accuracy you need to maintain for this to work well.
https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/paleoplanet69529/woodbear-s-red-oak-entry-t13237.htmlOk Mark I’ll try one trapped to the limits . Give me the the dimensions for a narrow pyramid bow similar to this one. From what I understand what you said the mass may get down to5-6 oz per limb on this bow.
1-1/8" wide again? I don't know how low the mass will get, but I can get you to where the entire limb is sharing the strain as evenly as possible. That minimizes the set by not overstraining any particular area of the limb. I forgot to ask, where did the limbs take set on this current bow?
Mark I feel it’s failing in tension and here is why. I think the neutral Plane has changed with the trapping because of less mass
The thing is, I have seen no evidence that wood can fail progressively in tension. In the various testing research I have seen the tension failures are always blow ups. It is only in compression it will progressively fail by taking set. If someone has data to show progressive failure in tension I would love to see it.
Mark