I have been working an ash stave a little and have it roughed out. It has natural deflex, quite a bit in fact. A knot worked out perfectly- disappeared on the belly as I worked it. I did not bandsaw the stave but instead tried to follow the grain, laying out a centerline and then making the rough-out the same width for the whole length (about 1 and 3/4" was what I could get from this stave). Now I see a mild propellor twist and some snakiness. Right now the limbs are about 7/8" thick and as I said, 1 and 3/4" wide. It's 70" long.
1) Is now the time to straighten the propellor twist or should I work the limbs thinner first?
2) Regarding the snakiness, I guess I will have to have the string cross the handle, right, even if the limbs do not become perfectly straight? Should I aim for stright or just getting the string to cross the handle? Should I thin the limbs more first or just go ahead and heat and straighten it?
3) After I get the stave straighter, I need help deciding on limb shape. I just want a bow that won't follow the string too much and will be durable. 45-50 pounds. I will probably back it with linen fibers (got some flax).