I'm not sure on where the diminishing returns start exactly. seems 60-65 is consensus. Though, I do find it oddly ironic to also be the limit where most people start saying that we are now pulling 'tooo much bow' to be 'comfortable' or accurate.
We need to remove the 'overbowed' feelings from the equation, because they are emotionally charged and entirely relative.
I think matt is on to something, because its partly a paradigm issue. The verbage of the question itself is dependent on definition.
His question is the one that is relevant to me. In other words, in real word shooting (the first 50-80 arrows), I feel every bit as comfortable shooting 60# as I do 80#. As such to me the "diminishing" point of return I am concerned with is the point where the extra pounds no longer produce more momentum. At any time there is a relative gain in momentum, I'm interested.
It makes sense to me to shoot a lighter bow, say a static tip recurve, that will produce the same momentum as a heavier bend in the handle d-bow, providing you can get such a bow quiet.
However, given all things equal, like accuracy and point of impact, I'll take the heavier weapon as long as it produces a gain in penetration power.
Dan
on a different note, IME, it also produces gains in speed because as I increase in weight it is more difficult to get over 11 gp #... but that is a relative thing again since I am favorably changing a variable.