Excellent post Mark.
Something I learned years ago about tension and compression strengths in relation to laminated composite bows is that the compression side, or the belly core material up against the belly glass is the first thing to go in extreme stress tests.
With fiberglass backed bows, the glass itself will handle compression without failure much better than carbon. Under extreme loading tests, the carbon typically delaminates from the core on the belly, then the core itself buckles from the belly side first. If you want to keep a carbon belly backing intact, best material you can use is rock hard maple….. even then…. It’s a tough one to pull off.
I tried a balsa wood core with bias weave carbon belly and back one time just for fun. All these bowyers were saying “core doesn’t matter” …. After all they were building foam core bows….. but… even on those foam core bows the ones that were holding up had maple on the belly that the carbon attached to.
Btw…. The balsa core failed miserably….
Never got to full draw and she blew up Big time! Those were fun years building time bombs. Some of those babies were seriously fast too until they blew up.
You want longevity, stick with eastern rock hard maple on the belly side of your stack and your lighter weight material towards the back….. or bamboo.
Kirk