Hey Scott,
A 32" draw can definitely get excellent performance, but the poundage of the bow can make a big difference.
Everyone seems to think the power stroke of the longer draw length is what makes the difference, and it does help a lot. But in reality, the stored energy in the bow is lost or gained in the transfer from the string to the arrow shaft.
a quick example without going into a lot of tech talk would be this.... Take a 64" Flatliner 50@30" bow with excellent preload that stacks up at about 31" and shoot a 500 grain arrow drawing that full 30".....Lets say we hit 195 fps @ 10 gpp.
Now we take a 66" model that is 50@32" that doesn't stack till you hit 33" and shoot the same arrow through it.... I would be really surprised if we got the same 195 fps. it would be close, but i doubt very much it would be faster.
The reason being is that you have more limb mass traveling forward with the 66" model, and the preload, or tension on the string at brace is less than the 64" 50@30" bow. Just because you have a longer power stroke, it still comes down to stopping the limbs clean, & transferring the energy into the arrow shaft.
another good example would be taking a HH style bow at 40# and testing it with 400 grain arrows, and taking a 60# HH and test it at 600. I can guarantee the 60# bow is going to be at least 15-20 fps faster just due to the higher preload.
With the Flatliner design. i can build these things draw length specific to a certain degree and maximize performance at any draw length by balancing the mass limb weight to the bows draw weight. But unfortunately the length of the bow restricts how far you can draw this limb design. a 32" draw would require a 66" length, and we'd need at least 55-60# to get the preload required to ring the 200 fps bell. That & a little luck....200 fps at 10 gpp is a tough one to pull off at any draw length.