Well, the first bow I made was an oak board and I put bamboo on both sides. Very bad tiller and eventually the oak got crunched and finally broke... I believe the actual term is crystalised??? It just can't take the bending and the wood cells and fibers get crushed and finally fail.
I keep meaning to measure my yumi style for you but keep getting sidetracked by yard work. Like I said before it's was a "yumi style" becuase everything was wrong about it... except it looks ok when shooting. I still like to shoot it but I'm going to try to do a more authentic one this spring or summer. Check out the build along on paleoplanet.
From reading about yumi making, everything is shaped before the glue up and the bow is glued and then it's done. They have been doing it so long that they don't 'tiller' the bows at all. The only wood pieces are the two wood strips on the sides of the bamboo core which MAY leave them some room to adjust things.
I'm thinking 3/8 for the core is way too thick. Yumi bows are 'backwards' when unstrung and with a core that thick, it's going to take an elephant to string it. Check out
http://www.yumi-bows.com/yumi.html for how a bow should look when it's being glued and wedged (is that a verb?). That's Koppendrayer's web site. I would love to get to his place sometime to see how he does things.
btw: I'm far from a expert on these things. There are a couple of other threads about making a yumi. I seem to recall one on here a while ago that was very good. Do a search on it... found it
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,11083.0.html very good write up.
also look at
http://www.kougei.or.jp/english/crafts/0707/f0707.htmlhere's a build along on paleoplanet
http://paleoplanet69529.yuku.com/topic/22774/t/Yumi.html?page=1