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Bows / Re: The best shape for a reflexed bow?
« Last post by simk on Today at 04:31:10 am »you are right Badger - I messed that up - the short bow does store less energy but is more efficient.
But why does it store less energy? String angle?
And why is it more efficient? Limb mass, limbtravel and inertia?
And why does the d/r in Tuomos experiment store more energy than the straight limbed bow? string angle?
Now: In practice we often see that short bows are faster — especially with light arrows — than the longer ones: is that maybe because limb mass and limb inertia (efficiency) matters more than stored energy?
If that is the case, when trying to make a fast bow, one should maybe focus more on efficiency than energy storage? How to optimize these contradictory facors?
Given that more stored energy usually means heavier and slower limbs, how do we find the sweet spot where arrow speed is maximized?
It must be where increasing stored energy starts to cost you too much efficiency by increasing limb mass and inertia.
Now where is that?
But why does it store less energy? String angle?
And why is it more efficient? Limb mass, limbtravel and inertia?
And why does the d/r in Tuomos experiment store more energy than the straight limbed bow? string angle?
Now: In practice we often see that short bows are faster — especially with light arrows — than the longer ones: is that maybe because limb mass and limb inertia (efficiency) matters more than stored energy?
If that is the case, when trying to make a fast bow, one should maybe focus more on efficiency than energy storage? How to optimize these contradictory facors?
Given that more stored energy usually means heavier and slower limbs, how do we find the sweet spot where arrow speed is maximized?
It must be where increasing stored energy starts to cost you too much efficiency by increasing limb mass and inertia.
Now where is that?
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