So, I'm tinkering, and just wondering where you'd tinker, next.
This longbow limb (strung pic) is a 12" profile taper from full width, to 3/4" at the tips. (1.375" full width). This was with a .002" taper lam, and a parallel lam, among the parallel veneer both sides. And the wedge is a straight taper wedge about 11" in length, .25 to 0. Bow draws ridiculously smooth, and is dead even draw until 33" draw on a 17" riser of mine. (64" amo). If you're wondering, 16 degree limb pads.
One thing I want to play with, is a thinner tip. going to 5/8 or 1/2" at the tips, perhaps a longer limb profile taper (instead of 12", maybe 16" or so to not neck down so fast). Purely want to try this to get a sense of what changes will make the limb feel or act differently, for my own learning. I was thinking too, about a 9" parallel to taper wedge, so about 5" of a .250 - 0" taper wedge in the actual limb after the riser.
Sorry for all of the background: question I have is, with this unstrung profile, and knowing it's a mildly shorter wedge, with a longer, thinner profile taper, what TAPER lamination would you stack with a parallel? I am thinking two parallels, due to the shorter wedge, and longer, thinner, profile taper. What are your thoughts?