ok maybe I am repeating but was just thinking this important,,
the double the draw plus 10% rule,, also is based on how the bow is going to hold up,,
the shorter the bow more likely to break,, or shift tiller or follow the string,
just becasue a bow can draw further does not mean it is going to perfrom well,,
its hard to make a short self bow draw far without the set effecting the performance,, so it just depends on what you want out of the bow,, on the other side of that,,,, is you can overbuild the bow and it will shoot like a dog too,,
the double the draw plus 10% is just a middle of the road ball park,, great bows can be built on both sides of that with consideration to the design and type of wood,,,,and the way its tillered,, lots of variables,, but the proof is in the pudding,,
make the bow,, shoot it 5000 times,,shot it for distance or through a chrono,, and you will know if you are on the right track,,
if all you care about is how it looks at full draw,or how far it will draw,,, then thats not really making a bow,, it has to shoot like a bow to be a bow,,