Alright guys, I got some results:
But first things first. I recognized pretty early that the bow is going to be far too weak. I was a bit too eager at the roughing out stage aka was the roughing out too rough. So I had to remove quite a bit material to get it fairly smooth. But hey, that was the first time I roughed out a bow from green wood with just a hatched. But I didn`t do much sraping at the back. I really liked to see how much the splitting surface can take.
Because the bow would have become far too weak anyway I decided to just tiller it quick and dirty and left some weak spots, to really stress it out and see if the back or the belly fails first. Here is a pic at full draw. Please don´t mention the tillering tree. That´s not the usual way I do it.
One can really see the weak spot in the right limb (that´s the upper limb) near the handle. The midsection is too stiff. The left limb is the lower one and bends ok, but it´s much stiffer than the other one.
As you might expect, the weak spot got overpowered and started crysaling. The bow drew 15# at 28".
So I shortened it from 70" to 66" inches and drew it again. It broke at about 20".
I inspected the broken section to find out, that the belly collapsed. Heres a picture of the broken area.
Then I also bent the intact limb by hand to see how much it can take. I bent it till I could here a cracking sound and checked the wood. The belly started to collapse, while the back was still fine! Then I caused it to break.
The fact, that the belly got chrysals before the back failed tells me, that the split surface works as a back just fine even with some imperfections and doesn´t need a lot of scraping and smoothing.
Here are pictures of the back before tillering:
To me using vertical grain is not necessarily faster then using the outermost ring under the bark. For sure it´s less effort than chasing a ring. And I found the roughing out quicker. I still wanna try to make a bow out of a small log that is just split in half and use the splitting surface as the back. A reversed bow if you want. In that case the advantage would be the rectangular cross section instead of the high crown a small log usually gives. But I postpone this to spring when the wood is more pliable an easier to split.
greetings from Austria