OOOPS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mult-tasking doesn't work when the wife and kids are talking to me. I need to stick to doing one thing at a time. I went back and read what I wrote and LOL...I too see several things wrong with what I wrote. My apologies for that.
A 10 string flemish has the same number of strands in the loops, but twice as much in the flemish (tie off). My bad. Doing too many things at once. I wasn't thinking. Still though, the flemish has twice as many strands in the loops as does an endless...and that the fact that I based my opinion on...and it was that fact that I recall explaining my observations in the "weight drop tests" I did some decade or so ago when comparing flemish to endless strings.
Again, my apologies for that error!
Rob, I watched your video, and you certainly make just as good an endless bowstring as anyone and better than most doing it the way you do.
The problem that I see though is you still only have 4 "full" load bearing strands in the bottom loop, as the "padding strands" are only held into position with a serving and are not load bearing strands. They are just padding strands. That said, I am sure they do increase the loop strength to some degree when compared to a non-padded endless (which is what I tested), but still just as your "whip" that you used to pull the tie off end of the serving back through when completing your serving...one can see that string can slip under the serving and move. Therefore, the padding loops although they may increase loop strength to some degree they certainly aren't likely to have "full" load bearing capabilities as would the main body 4 strands that make up the 8 strand string. All the weight of your bow is still on the load bearing strands...in other words, the 4 strands on the bottom loop is your "weak link."
The way a flemish is tied off, the greater the tension on the string, the harder and tighter the flemish is held together as the load further "locks" the flemish loops together. So again, I don't see the endless type having the same load strength as a flemish string. I am willing to test a padded endless string against an equal count flemish to see if you wish (only for the benefit of knowledge). I have nothing to gain or lose from such a test. The test I would recommend again would be a "wait drop test" to mimic the impact of a heavy weight bow being shot, as I wouldn't want to use a real bow since non-of us want to see a bow fail under dry firing or something.
In end, I think I (or someone else) would get the same results I obtained before when using a non-padded endless because...
Going back to a "10 strand string" instead of an 8 strand string...
1. A 10 strand flemish string has the full strength of 10 load bearing strands in the body and in the loops. The "padding isn't load bearing" and is just "padding."
2. A 10 strand endless has the full strength of only 5 load bearing strands in the loops as "a chain is only as strong as its weakest link." Again, the padding isn't load bearing. As I mentioned above, I do believe the padding will help to some degree, but the padding that is added to an endless string isn't likely to carry as much load as are the primary load bearing strands that run through the body of the string since they are only held in by a serving and aren't really bearing the load of the draw. In the endless, this padding is just that...padding.
Five strands just can't hold the load that 10 strands can hold. This again would explain why endless strings tend to break the loops, while flemish strings tend to fail in the body. The only exception I have seen to this is when someone had a sharp string groove that cut the loops...and I think both of us would agree that you can't blame a string for being cut by a sharp corner of glass on a bow that needed to be filed smoother, as that would cut any type of string.