okay so i got the first one to full draw.
Here ya go:
You can see from the full draw pic that the string angle is very low. It even LOOKS greater than it really is, because i carved away a taper off the inside of the tip, about 3/8" to nothing over 5".
This was awesome. After heat treating it, i had a few benefits.
1. The poundage went up from 50 @ 24 to 50 @ 21.
2. It smelled like sweet pine sap when i scraped it.
3. The varnish seemed to have saturated the porous earlywood on the belly, and made the wood seem denser.
I tried a few different ways of carving the levers to reduce the tips and add something unique. The first attempt, some runes, looked bad so i rasped them off. The next attempt, a spiral, worked perfectly, but when i attempted to carve leaves in between the lines of the spiral, they looked bad (read,i suck) so i rasped them off.
This is pretty much how they look now.
The spirals are on in such a way that when the bow is drawn to full, they all seem to point at the nock. It's simple, but i like it, and strangely enough, just by using the same 45 degree angle that the string nocks have, the parallel lines wind up being 2.5" away from each other, fitting in perfectly with the length of the transition from limb to lever. Just a happy chance. I'm not that good.
Can't wait to see how the other two play out.