Just having a hard time wrapping my mind around it. The fibers in tension on the back increase with the surface area, but by increasing the surface area you spread out the tension stress on the fibers. If you narrow the surface area you are increasing the tension force on the fibers available but reducing the compression force. This is the way I see it, the more tension strength the more compression force.
When I have made walnut bows in Pyramid style, they fret in the lower portion of the limbs where the tension force is the greatest and bend the least. An old bowyer has should me how he compensates for this by keeping the limbs wide until the last 1/4 of the limb. He says it spreads the tension load but also it gives it more compression area, which in turn spreads the force over a greater area.
So by lowering it's plane, you're making it thinner, allowing it to bend further without the risk of damaging the belly side.
I understand this, that is why a rounded belly increases compression, but would not a wide flat belly have more compression strength? or better said spread the compression force over a lager area?
Problem I have with backing 1. is I hate to back anything that don't need backing. and 2.backing a compression weak wood don't help it become less compression weak, in fact it may increase the problem, that is why you don't see boo backed black walnut bows everywhere. The backing just helps from getting a limb up side the head........ unless you add a belly lam hmmmmmm
Oh just a note here, crown is not that great, limb was all an 18" bar on my chainsaw wanted.