Hello:
For perspective:
After owning and still having many fine longbows and recurves built by highly regarded bowyers, all praised here, and having heart-to-heart discussions, here's a summary of a few years of their experiences:
All say in one way or another that the amount of carbon material used by our entire industry is so small that no carbon supplier will warrant detailed quality control. Each of our respected bowyers has been stung with erratic qc, even from the same sources that aircraft wing builders rely on! One frustrating example involved the layup missing a crucial bias-ply layer, leading to limb twisting.
By far, the greatest cause of delaminations in both carbon and non carbon bows is temperatures way above the tolerance limits of the epoxy resin tolerance, approximately 140 degrees. When a delamination event arises AND the owner is candid, if he even knows, that the bow has been in hot environments, the bowyer has a good idea what caused the materials, not fabrication, failure. The carbon was not the cause.
My experiences involve twisted limbs and gooey resin bubbling at seams. EACH WERE TRACED TO SHIPPING IN HOT WEATHER. One sat in an exposed FEDEX van with outside temp's approaching 100 degrees, for four days over a three day weekend.
Now, I only have bows shipped during cold seasons.
Each of the fine bowyers involved was as nice, understanding and responsive as anyone could expect and I've done more with each after the events.
I cringe at having to transport ANY bow into hot climates. Just sitting on a loading ramp can cause too much exposure. 140 degrees is too easily reached in auto's, trucks, etc.
Some bowyers that don't like carbon have indicated noise issues, but agree that it can be from shooter induced variables. Others simply say the few FPS gained are not worth the headaches. All agree that the temperature demon applies to their, NON CARBON bows, too.
Respectfully,
Kevin