Come on, guys, give 'em up.
LOL, funny how this thread mutated,......interesting too is how much we are into owr terminology
On that subject i see it like George and some others, not that it's the right one, just the way I use it.
I see set as the collaps of the cells changing the profile of a bow during tillering, I see follow asthe bow being bend into a deflexed look once unbraced.
You can have a bow with set but no follow, and you can have a bow with no set and follow
.......now for the no set I know that Steve Gardner as a method, i haven't dabbed into it since I can't get my brain to wrap around those technicalitys.
the only time I have achieved no set was on a couplle of deflexed YEW bow, otherwise some degree of set has being there.
On the matter of minimaising set, this is what I've being quite lucky lately and got some decent results.
I do a lot of shaping before I do any bending, I can tell how heavy the bow is by now just by feeling the phisical weight.
As soon as i have the limbs balanced and before i do any more than minimal floor tillering, i temper the bow, than I long string it to brace hight, at that point a get a string on it and as soon the bend looks nice I give it a good sweat.
I go thru the normal tree tillering to 20" , at this point I temper the bow again, from now on no more tillering tree,( even on my final check for draw weihgt on the tree I only draw to 1" less than final draw, ) I shoot 25 to 50 arrows every 1/2" increment of draw weight, adjusting tiller as necessary, after every adjustment i go back 1" and restart the shooting in process, 1" before full draw I do a final tempering