Early wood on the belly surely just sits there passively. About like roughing up a belly surface with a rasp. It can't have any functional integrity.
It doesn't, and that's why I think ( key word ) it going into the belly is detrimental to a bow.
Detrimental how? Unless its a pyramid bow or a bow with extremely thick late wood growth rings, there has to be some early wood coming into the belly surface. I'm just thinking about the osage bows I've built...how could you not have early wood coming into the belly of the working portions of the limbs without it being a pyramid design? I agree...its not just sitting there passively. It is getting compressed and sheared and doing whatever weak, pithy wood does when it gets compressed and released, but for it to contribute any way to set, it's physical properties would have to overwhelm and overcome the physical resistance-to-compression properties of the latewood layers it's sandwhiched between. If the latewood in the compression plane is able to withstand full draw without it's cells crushing an colapsing, it will bounce back, and I can't see how any amount of that pithy early wood could stop it.