I've been making bows for a long time, but I could use some advice on this one. It started as the lower limb in my crooked bow build-along, but after the top limb broke I bought a takedown sleeve and decided to make a takedown. The folks at 3 rivers said to make the upper limb have the long part of the sleeve. I happened to choose to keep the lower limb of the crooked bow the lower limb again. Unfortunately, the lower limb is the weaker of the 2 now which is made worse by the fact that I shoot 3 fingers under. This bow is for me and I wanted a short longbow. Right now it is 54lbs, 60" long, exactly what I wanted. This is the shortest unbacked selfbow I've ever made.
Here are pictures. The distance from the string to the limb was even before shooting (lower limb on the left). After shooting both limbs took some set, but the lower limb took more. I am definitely stressing the limbs so I expected some set. Should I tiller the upper limb to be even with the lower (and accept the weight loss), put the rest on the bottom of the handle and turn the bow over, do both or is there another approach?
On the good side, the green electricians tape temporary rest worked fine, the bow shot well, and I did get to shoot with my granddaughter.
Thanks,
George