First off, I haven't made an HLD bow yet and I'm certainly no physicist. This is just my conclusions, hypothesis, mental flapping or whatever that I have come to after much deliberation and contemplation of this design. 150,000 miles in the saddle every year leaves a lot of time to think. I believe that it works so well because the limb doesn't know its arched. If the basic principle on which a bow works is the opposing forces of tension and compression, then surely the HLD is mostly a wider flatbow thats arched. Meaning the entire outer surface is under tension, while the entire inside of the arc is under compression. This would put more wood to work than if it were simply a high crown flat belly design. I got out pen and paper to attempt to illustrate what I mean. The arrows in the neutral zone are representing the way I perceive the opposing forces of the different cross sections. If my thinking is correct, the ten percent of thickness that carries the tension and the ten percent that like wise carries the compression is drastically improved with the HLD. In effect, your taking an inch and a half wide sapling and getting the effect of a much wider flatbow. If you add in the structural rigidity added by the HLD, you are talking significant improvement over the old high crown flat belly design. Just my opinion of course. If there are holes in my explanation, please feel free to challenge it and enlighten me. Josh