Thanks for all of the responses. This is great information from very knowledgable people. Thanks for passing it along.
I think I'll do what Jawge said "given a stave with natural reflex I'd even it off and go for it"
dwardo,
You make me think if this is natural reflex or not. I found a pic where my friend and I split the log into staves. The log came from a tree that was leaning at a 30 deg angle back in the woods, the tree was about 40 ft tall. The log was split into quarters and only two of the quarters reflexed. By chance were the reflex staves on the top of the tree holding the weight? It didn't come from a curved log/limb to start with as Pappy noted, so would it be considered natural reflexed?
The question was how much is too much reflex. I feel if I don't hold at least 1/2 of what I put in I put in a bit too much or screwed up a bit when tillering. I built one the other day that is 75# at 28". I started with 3 1/2" reflex and finished with -1". After resting it goes back to 1/2" reflex. The bow is doggy. After resting the bow will pull about 82# on the first pull and the second pull 75#. They should be within 1# of each other so bow has been badly overstrained.
Good info.............I now know why my first bow (hickory flat bow) first pull after brace was 52# and there after was 47#. I overstress the bow during tillering. I need to remember this one.
gstoneberg,
I do not have enough experience tillering to understand your comment "Impatience is my worst enemy...that and not paying attention" Would you please take a little time and explain your comment a little more?
I don't consider good information "highjacking"
Thanks again for passing it along'
DB