I would be interested in trying on the back and belly, no glass on a Longbow. Just for curiosity and looks
You want to be very careful putting carbon on the belly side of a bow limb. You can get away with it on some D shape long bow designs that the over all limb flexes and distributes the load more evenly. And even on some mild R/D long bow designs. Typically uni carbon is used for this on a deep core design.....
But... on hybrid R/D long bows where the working limb is shorter, or on recurve limbs.....The Belly side carbon will often separate and shear the bond. Even using rock hard maple as a belly lam. The stuff doesn't compress, and the maple does.... Then it buckles the carbon after the bond is compromised. and BOOM! Thar she blows mate!.... They are time bombs... Ya never know when they are going to let go...And they always blow after the belly carbon buckles...
On the other hand .....it makes for some great explosive limb failures worth getting on video.
As far as putting this stuff on the back of a limb with no glass... I think you'd find it will work just fine. I've built bow limbs with 2 layers of stable core alone on the back and it wasn't purdy , but was successful... I don't know whether it would hold up under compression on the belly side though...Never tried that.
I'm going to try this new .019 stuff on the back over stable core for a total of .034 composite backing. I'll bet does well for 35-55# limbs.....
But i'm thinking the lighter weight recurves might get better stability with a slight separation between the carbon and the stable core......I'll try it both ways. Carbon next to the belly under .030 glass, and stable core towards the back. The switch it up on the next lay up...
The reason i think the stability might be better with the carbon towards the belly comes from past experience building single and double carbon bows. If you could put it on the belly itself without building a bomb, THAT will give you serious torsional strength.... But i'm not going back down that expensive rabbit hole again... Been there... done that... Too expensive to be replacing on warranty.... It's not a matter of IF they will blow.... Its just a matter of when... Need glass on the belly for longevity and fine tuning your limbs draw weight and balance... You cant sand that carbon for adjustment. It is... What it is...
Big outfits that mass produce double carbon limbs have to match them up as close as possible, and send them out the door praying they make it until the warranty expires, or the customer hangs it on his wall instead of shooting it a lot... They are all time bombs...
That's about 10 cents worth of my opinion... Take it or leave it...... Kirk