Jawge, I know you were scraping locust before I ever seen a bow, but I've honestly had nothing but trouble out of wide, thin limbed locust bows. Chrysal, chrysal, chrysal. Locust was used for hundreds of years by the Indians around here as their choice bow wood, and most of their bows were in the inch to inch-and-a-quarter width range (bending handle.) Probably my tillering skills or lack of, but locust is so dense that I always wind up with really thin limbs at those wide widths to get a 50 lb bow, and those thin limbs are really sensitive to the slightest irregularity and want to hinge and twist on me. I never made a decent shooter from locust until I started experimenting with narrower limbs. I agree with the make it longer part.