Everything you said sounds correct, to me Mark. I'm talking about taking the next step, which for me is attempting to tweak the ratio of material volume, in tension vs compression, to the tension side. Why not take advantage of the compressive properties of the heaver woods and reduce it's mass in relation to the lighter more elastic Bamboo? Sure, the Osage does not need the bamboo to make a good bow, but if you are making a composite, the goal should be to maximize the attributes of each material. I don't recall anybody stating they would prefer a bow will more compressive resistance than tensile? If somebody has that preference, please share your rational.
I can't believe I got sucked into the Neutral Zone again! My character would have been killed off on the first Star Trek episode. The worst part is being sucked into the intangible. Yeah there are formulas for estimating the location of the neutral zone, but how thick is it? one cell? one molecule? one atom?
How do you locate something that itself can't feasibly be measured? And in a dynamic environment like the ones we create will bending limbs and fulcrums, does the plane shift progressively like the increase in resistance to the bending force?
Some folks wish to be revealed the meaning of everything on their death bed, me, I would be fine with just the mystery of the neutral plane