You are right about the black uni carbon not having much sex appeal on looks, but that stuff can turn the performance up a notch used on a long bow design. The bias weave is used mostly on recurve limbs for added torsional stability, and it's better looking stuff. Its often laid up together with Uni to improve performance.
I burned through about 10 grand years ago ordering different pre preg lay ups with different thickness and composition. Each layer of pre preg carbon they use adds .005 - .006 thousandths of thickness. Using X as the bias weave, and O as the uni.... I had XOX laid up that ran about . .015- .017 , and XOXOX that ran about .030 in thickness. You had to balance out the X evenly or it would twist after lay up... So an XOXO wasn't a good choice the panels would twist. We even had it laid up XOOX and had a layer of glass on the belly so we could run it on the belly side of the RC limbs.... We had mixed success with this lay up. The limbs that did held up for awhile were rock solid, and very fast.... But the longevity of these belly carbon lay ups were poor on recurve limbs...... BUT.... That XOOX was great on long bows.
The worst part about all this was once you found a good lay up, the next time you order it, it could be stronger or weaker by a lot.... Trying to hit draw weight was a nightmare with that stuff. You don't sand bias weave carbon on the face.
Bottom line is the stuff is just too darn expensive to mess with fot the average guy, or small shop IMO.... If you take some time tweaking your limb designs, you can get right up there in performance with the fastest carbon bows out there, and the longevity is much better.
Good luck to you guys playing with it....
Kirk