foudarme,
I do not have a fixture that enables me to objectively measure how torsionally stable these limbs are. Perhaps I will one of these days but I currently do not have one. However, subjectively I can say that the Generation II ACS recurve limbs we're now building are more torsionally stable than any other limb I have ever tried to twist by hand, and I've tried to twist quite a few. I think that Mike and Jason would agree with that rather broad statement.
Subjective observations like the one I just made above are not my style. I prefer to limit myself to objectively-measurable and objectively-comparable information. Without a data base of limbs that are the same length and the same draw weight for comparison it's impossible for me to be anything other than subjective.
I will say this - we just built a set of 31# @ 28" XL ACS recurve limbs and it was impossible to twist them by hand, no matter how hard we tried. A very light-weight set of limbs in an XL length should be as torsionally unstable as any set of limbs a bowyer can build. Anyone holding or using this particular set of limbs would be surprised by how torsionally stable they were. The Crazy John's carbon really does the trick for stability.