to me, coming in lighter at the same thickness. means there is less glass in there.
now what that means in the long run, with regards to longevity and performance
but it will have some effect!
enough to worry about
The pieces of Gordons that i have studied closely, and cut up and looked at the cross sections, the streak areas seem to be less than perfect saturated glass fibers.
which means they are right at their saturation limit of glass to resin ratio!
hence also the slightly more opaque quality of the Gordons vs BP.
Which to my experience, tells me that the BP , has a higher resin to glass ratio, which improves the clarity, but will also reduce the "spine" of the glass.
Remembering the tensile strength of this matrix comes from the glass, not the resin.
So a matrix with a higher glass ratio will always be better!
so, once again, is this significant enough to warrant concern, and how will it effect performance and longevity of a bow built with BP glass
the real test may be to approach one of those industrial testing agencies, a put sample pieces on one those cyclical flexion machines, that measure the repetitive flexion durability???!!??