All this info is interesting and the points are valid. But to strictly answer the question about the early wood being the weak link causing set...I don't think so. Set is caused when the belly wood is compressed to the point of cell colapse and once it is colapsed, it stays colapsed...thus causing the set. That crunchy early wood, it seems to me, would colapse under compression extrememly easily and shear under tension very easily. The only way...again, this is just what I am assuming/educated-guessing...the only way that early wood crushing could actually cause the set we see is if it, in a colapsed-cell state, was strong enough to overpower the late wood directly around it on the belly side in the compression plane that is resisting compression forces...and that ain't happening. Can the early wood in a stave with a large amount of early wood to late wood ratio affect the late wood's overall ability to resist compression forces? I'm sure it can have some negative impacts, but to what degree, I havn't a clue. That said, I seriously doubt it is anywhere near the top many reasons that a bow takes set. Like has been mentioned before...set is far more likely due to poor tillering and mistakes by the boyer in the tillering process than anything to do with the early wood ratio of the stave.