Let me say that I am not a speed freak, by any means.
I am building my third hybrid off the same form. The first was 60", the second 62", and the third (current one) is 64" nock to nock. The first used two bamboo and one action-boo lam. The second had four hickory lams. This third one has two action-boo and two osage lams. All have .040 clear glass back and belly. All lams have a .001 taper. I liked the profile on the first two but decided to use power lams up the belly ramp on the third to force the mid limb to bend more. Here is the full drawn profile on the first two.
I used a .060 red elm power lam under the belly lam running up each belly fade ramp. The power lams are 12" long and extend into the limb 5" past the end of the riser fade out. The end of the power lams fade from full thickness to nothing in the last 6". It really smoothed out the bend right off the fades.
My performance testing was done on a shooting chrony. I was using a finger release with a big shot glove. I was drawing to a 28" mark on the arrows, and an assistant telling me when to release. All performance strings were built with 12 strands of D-97, and had padded loops. I was shooting as close as I could get to 10 grains per pound. The last bow (64") draws 52@28 and I was shooting a 519 grain CE Heritage arrow.
The first 60" bow shot 170 fps. The second shot 175 fps. The third averaged just over 180 fps. It was 176 with a 12 strand B-50 string.
If I went with fewer strands of D-97, used a shooting machine, and a mech release, I'm sure it would be close to 190 fps.
Comments?