Carbon backing is a definite plus on properly designed limbs. Find someone who knows what he is doing when he builds a carbon backed bow. I have no experience with carbon on the belly, but I know that there are very few people who do it well. David Knipes probably knows as much as anyone about who does the best work with carbon and ceramics on bow limbs. I bet he will tell you that Black Swan is the leader in those technologies. For carbon backed longbow limbs, I can definitely recommend Bob Morrison since I own several of his bows with foam cores and carbon backing on the longbow limbs. Gregg Coffey has been using carbon on the backs of a few of his Shrews for a year or more, and I have a Classic Hunter on order with foam cores and carbon backing. Gregg says the carbon adds speed to his bows, whether actionboo or foam cores are used. Chad Holm told me that he has successfully used carbon backing to increase performance. Obviously, the ACS CX longbows use carbon to great advantage, and I really like the way mine shoots, but John Harvard has reported difficulties with the carbon in his new recurve prototypes, with the longbow actually outperforming the recurve at this point in the design process. There are other bowyers out there using carbon (including some who have posted in this thread) who seem to have had good results with the material. I don't see any drawbacks to carbon backing when it comes to longbow limbs, other than an increase in cost. Recurve limbs present a more difficult challenge to design a carbon backed limb that actually functions better than one without carbon. David Knipes says that Black Swan has solved the mystery, but most others have not. Ask your bowyer what he thinks about carbon in the limbs and take his advise. Most won't want to use it in recurve limbs, and some won't want to use it at all. They know what works in their bows.
Allan