Well I don't usually make my osage bow tips
ridiculously massive so I guess this bow is the exception ryoon. I got the bow working in the middle and for some reason the handshock went away, also it shoots quite quick and hard now. Counter intuitive to logic, of course. As is almost every bow I make anymore.
It still does not bend right at the 10" or so middle part of the bow where the handle would be.
"The reason it took so much set is because all the work is being done in the outer limbs."
It only took about an 1" set, on one limb, as it already had about 1 1/2" on both limbs, as I said the stave was deflexed. And yes I understand, as I have said and pointed out, that the bow is not working in the center in the tiller picture.
"Yup, I would have heat bent that deflex out if at all possible. My last attempt at a bow with deflex wasn't very stellar. It's just hard"
I'm used to messing with deflexed staves, but that little curve screws me up so bad. I was kinda looking to see if anybody had the same experience before with something similar. One thing that may contribute to handshock is the fact that right at the center of the deflexed curve, (you can see in the picture) I have to leave a good amount of wood there or it will bend so much it is crazy, and the over all tiller will
look horrid, even though the limb would be working equally. My person preference would be to have the limb work evenly and the tiller "look" good. That is just me. You would think I would leave the whole limb an equal thickness, but when a curve is deflexed so much like that in a limb I have found, you really have to leave a good amount of extra wood to sculpt the tiller into an arch.