Looking at the pics some people have posted of their lam layups you will see a long wedge, maybe a power lam, cores and a tip wedge, and glass.
My questions are about taper rates with these designs. If you are using a power lam, what is the taper rate of the power lam? Then are your cores tapered as well? Tip wedges. Same question about rates?
Tapered power lams, parallel cores, and tapered tip wedge? Or
Tapered everything?
I'm afraid Max might have complicated things for you a bit going into details a bit heavy. Its obvious he's been doing this stuff awhile.
How bout we start with basic taper theory and a few facts first...
If we are talking D shaped long bows. These are typically very narrow width profile compared to RC limbs. A faster taper rate of .004 is very common on long bows. Typically 2 .002 tapers are used. The same long lean fades used on TD limbs to push the working limb portion out further towards the tips is still very desirable, but is harder to do shaping a riser block on a one piece bows, and that is where power lams come into play. You can use 16"-18" riser block material and push the fade tips out to 22-26" placing the power wedge 4" past your riser fades.
Power lams can be used on TD limbs too to extend the fades of a shorter wedge assembly, but most guys just mill longer lean wedges. In some cases like TD Bear aftermarket limbs, or wild curved wedges on some designs, its easier to use a power wedge in combination with your milled wedges like an ILF toggle wedge for example.
Getting back to taper rates... You can go with faster taper rates like a pair of .002 for depp core long bows, but going with RC limbs, or RD long bows (Limbs with a lot of deflex / reflex) or even hybrid long bows like mine, you need to come down on your over all forward taper rate to maintain limb stability. For example: i use .004 FT on my Flatliner design. .003 on my hybrid long bow, and i go with .001 on my RC limb design. I even drop down to using just parallel lams in my low poundage RC limbs to keep the limbs from going sideways.
There are a lot of guys that go up to .002 forward taper on their RC limb designs with fairly good results. But it depends on the actual limb shape how stable the results will be. There are a lot of guys that used to use .002 and tried an .0015 then a .001 on RC limbs and figure out they get better overall stability in lighter weight bows using less forward taper, and often times better performance.
that should give you some basics to chew on...
As far limb design itself goes there are some basics too. But if you built one limb form with no stops set, and sent it to 10 different bowyers, you'll most likely end up with 10 different bows completely. one form can produce 50 different limb configurations shifting the stops, limb lengths, and taper rates.... Its never ending.... Kirk