No, you're missing the point. I was strictly talking about people making a bow that is a few degrees sharper than 90 and other people saying that the recurve should be eased off a few degrees in order for the recurve to work at all.
Would you actually leave the full mass on the recurves in the real world? Reduce both of your bows at the tips as much as you safely can and then test them again. That's what we actually do when we make bows
PatM: and what will you compare then? Arrow speed of bows of different poundage?
Next the full mass: well I explained you cannot tiller PVC that way. Despite this, the highly recurved bow performed much worse.
The point I was trying to make is that a force-draw curve is not a good proxy of performance. Bows with fat hooks have fat FD-curves. But they are deceiving. They store more energy but do not necessarily impart more energy to the arrow. I have explained the mechanics of the reason for this.
Two bows with the same peak draw weight, one sharply recurved the other weakly: which one will shoot a 10 gpp arrow faster (or transfer its stored energy most efficiently)? Probably the bow whose FD-curve resembles a straight line the most.
I wasn't even talking about a few degrees above 90. The point is that whenever you have a recurve that's not lifting off during some part of the draw, that reduces efficiency of the bow. So how would you test this then?
Recurves, especially in highly strained designs like the various asiatic composites, make the bow unstable (flip-flop tendency) unless the entire lower limb is made very wide and the ears are made very stiff. One way to reduce this lateral unstability a bit is by allowing the ears to be set back a bit more than a contact ear at brace.
The hungarian composites lift off immediately (contact recurve with long ears), but the lower limbs are very wide, and the ears are stabilized laterally with bone, for its very high stiffness. The ears are rather heavy, but the lift-off is immediate.
Turkish composites have rather short and light ears, and are set back a tiny bit. This setback adds stability, and lift off is very early in the draw. So it concedes a tiny bit of efficiency for stability. Idem for the korean bow.
The Chinese Manchu composite has ears set back a high degree. They lift off only at about 22". But when drawn to 36 or even 40", this is even relatively speaking a fast lift-off. These bows weren't made for high efficiency, they were made very heavy to shoot war arrows the size of broomsticks. They didn't care about 10 gpp or high dry fire speed.
So how do you define "in order for the recurve to work at all", and how would you test this without comparing apples to pears? And mind you, it will show exactly the same as what I've shown if you can make a level playing field.