Alex
My friend tried my suggestion to lower his knocking point by quarter of an inch. He says the bowl is now quiet with excellent arrow flight. It’s no longer broken so he’s all done fixing it. I still don’t understand the physics/geometry of “why” this worked. If you have any insight on this, I would love to hear about it.
Bill, that makes sense to me from a geometry perspective - to be honest, I have FAR less experience than most folks on here when it comes to bow building, I just have a knack for physics. So most of my thoughts on this are theoretical and not backed up by experience.
The nock point just may not have been ideal for a few reasons, many of which are solely dependent on the arrow and not the bow. But ignoring arrow dynamics, lowering the nock point to solve the problem would make me think his top limb was probably storing/expending more force than the bottom, so tuning would be difficult. With the lower nock point, that takes strain off the top limb and places more on the bottom, potentially allowing both tips to arrive at brace height more simultaneously and with more equal force. Again, just from a geometry perspective.
It could also just be the angle made by the limb tip, arrow pass, and nock point was just too acute at the top and to big at the bottom. No bow/arrow combo is going to like extremes for those angles.