Just a heads up... There is a topic on the Bowyers Corner on FB right now with carbon fiber... A few of the guys that have worked with it are on there... Might be worth a look for you all...
Since you are on the subject of limb weight, I have always wondered how much weight you would have to lose in the limb to gain 5 fps... Do you guys have any idea?? Is there a way of calculating that??
Well I figure if I can't get into this conversation maybe I use use your brains to help me out calculating this this problem...
I'm not much on calculating. That's for smarter people than me and some of them are right here on this topic. I include yourself in that group. If I'm wrong, you have tricked me with your persistance.
However, I did do an experiment with weights on the limb tips of a 66" ASL. The results were surprising to me. I thought my added weights would have much greater effect on the arrow speed.
Something to think about here though is that first of all the results of adding weight to the tips of limbs is probably going to vary a whole lot with design. I think if this were done with a high performance recurve or a flight bow the effects would be way more pronounced. The other thing is that the weight of the whole shot moving forward has a different effect on performance depending on the location of the weight. If we start at the nocking point of the string and progress to the limb tip and then down the limb to the fades, I'm pretty sure the addition of weight will have a decreasing effect on performance (speed) as that progression is followed. Adding weight to the limb two inches beyond the fades might not even be noticeable.
Anyway, I added equal amounts of weight to the tips of this bow and chronographed it with increasing weight added to the tips.
There's a few pictures here too. Copied and pasted from the notes I took the day of the experiment.
Bow:
ASL 66” NTN
Slight string follow
44# @ 28”
This bow has no tip overlays and pin nocks
Weight was progressively added to both bow tips and the arrow speed checked with a chronograph. The weight was added by taping quarters to the tips of the bow. Each quarter weighs approx 87 grains.
All shots are with the same arrow. The arrow weight is about 625 grains. I didn't weigh the specific arrow used but that is in the range of that set of arrows.
First, four shots with no weight to establish a base line
141.8
139.9
137.3
139.5
Avg 139.6
Next four shots were with one quarter taped to each tip of the bow, so 87 grains of additional tip weight.
137.2
139.8
139.6
138.2
Avg 138.2 Equals 1.4 fps slower than unweighted tips
That resulted in such a minor speed difference that I went next to three quarters on each tip for a total of 261 grains of added weight.
138.7
137.9
138.7
137.8
Avg 138.2 This is identical to the speed with only one quarter on each tip. This is probably explained by the statistical margin of error.
The next increment was four quarters on each tip for a total of 348 grains of added weight on each tip.
137.0
135.5
135.8
137.0
Avg 136.3 Now, we have arrived at a speed loss of 3.3 fps.
And finally, six quarters were added to each bow tip for a total weight of 522 grains of added weight on each tip. This is in excess of one ounce per tip with one ounce equaling 437.5 grains.
134.1
130.4
134.4
135.6
Avg 133.6 this is a total of 6 fps loss of speed with the 522 grains added to each tip.