Well Shredd …. I don’t think limb pad angle has a dad burn thing to do with vertical stability myself. It’s the geometric shape of the limb that determines the limb thickness of the limb to get a set draw weight, and where the limb is bending makes a difference too.
Let’s do an example here…. A straight unstrung profile bow like an ASL or Hill style long bow requires a stack height at say .400 for a 50# bow. These typically run at at. .003 - .004 forward taper rate, have no power wedges, and the limbs bend from the fades to the tips in a D shape. These require longer lengths of 66”-68” to get a 30-32” draw without finger pinch. But…. There is rarely a vertical or torsional stability issue because the limb thickness is still . .320 in the outer working portion of the limb.
As you start introducing more reflex and an elliptical shape to the form it requires much less stack height to achieve the same draw weight. And width to depth strength ratio run 8:1 .This is where changing taper rates and manipulating WHERE the limb is bending. “The working portion” or working limb for short, comes into play. It’s the depth and thickness of the limb in the working portion of the limb , and the length of the working portion that effects vertical stability the most. Width can and will have an effect on torsional stability to a certain point, but the true strength comes with limb thickness.
Look closely at that video I did on vertical instability. It’s the geometric shape of the limb that reduces the limb thickness in the outer portion that causes this flip flop limb.
You can apply the same theory to recurve bows in terms of geometric shape and limb thickness. But it’s torsional stability most guys fight with the RC designs. The vertical stability of a recurve is mitigated by the string laying on the back of the hook at brace. Most guys try to stay with wider limb widths to stabilize a recurve, and it does help a bit…. But the thickness of the limb at the base of the curl is the most important factor. If you have good depth at that point, you can build a very narrow recurve with good stability, and be pleasantly surprised at your performance increase.
The only time the limb pad angle comes into play is taking a finished limb and changing the limb pad angle. But this changes everything…. Preload, brace height, the point of lift off from the curve, and potential draw length parameters.
An adjustable riser is excellent for fine tuning the preload by adjusting limb pad angle on a prototype limb design. But that only goes so far before you need to go back and revisit your limb shape coming out of the form…..
I have a hybrid long bow with a 22 degree limb pad angle on my first generation Sasquatch LB that is rock solid at 50# with an .003 taper rate. With that same form building a 35 pound bow, I drop to an .002 taper rate to maintain stability.
So the question will be asked…. How do you get your geometric shape that will give you decent torsional and vertical stability? Besides building many many different forms and trail and error I can’t give you a secret formula, and neither can an engineer. But I can tell you one thing that will help a lot. Go easy on the deflex sweep, come off your fade tips with a flat portion or maybe slightly deflexed towards the belly, and push your reflex out towards the tips more. This will stiffen thing up dramatically and give you more depth to the limb thickness. Then you can adjust location and length of where that limb bends with wedges, (working limb) and THEN fine tune the preload with limb pad angle and string length once you find a winner.
It’s pretty simple…. Right? I think that was about .05 cents worth there…
Kirk