Brad,
No, take another look at a mag riser and see if you don't think I'm right. You can(presumably) shoot a bear t/d with the latches undone because the limb butts are seated in the pockets and the locator screw and string tension prevents the limb from unseating. (look at all the bows, like the old Herters t/d, where the limbs just sit in a pocket.) But, these screws are on the other side of the latch, in the back and the forward travel of the limb could possibly "lever" these screws right out of the holes! Take the screws out of the latch of a mag riser, if you have one, and insert a limb in the latch/riser. Push the limb forward slightly and you will see what I mean. It simply folds forward.
Maybe I'm fretting over nothing, but I don't think so. Maybe it would only happen if the string breaks, and maybe it really doesn't take much thread contact to hold it all together. I agree, it must have been shot at least some time with the stripped thread-I bought it used/refinished at least 15 years ago, so I don't have any idea. I did shoot it some - and it felt just like any other Bear T/D bow.
yeah, slightly longer screws are likely to work. But, the holes are darn near through the to the limb pocket now, and it seems the easiest is to drill them through, tap them, back the screws out, cut them off, and reassemble. Then I can have good thread contact clear to the bottom of the hole, with a screw that is not tapered. Should make a stronger assembly, don't you think?
Heck, it seems to me it would be stronger than the original design.