Hello,
I posted a while back on a piece of hickory that I layed out straight but after floor tiller when I put the bow on a string to tiller it was clear it was twisted. When you looked at the belly of the bow the string tracked half inch to the left.
I put it in the jig and gave it a nice toasting with a wrench and milk jug on each limb to straighten it out. I went a little past straight, re tiller and now the string was in the same spot but the limbs were now flexing the opposite way...
So I got the bow down to 60 lbs via tillering. (All the thickness on the limbs were within 1 mm so it wasn't my tillering that did it.) So I put it in the jig again and straightened the limbs with another good heat treat and my pine tar turpentine mixture so as to not burn the wood and gave it another good heat treating. After a little handle shaping it falls dead center and the limbs have very little twist to them.I hope it stays that way. Today I took it out and shot it about 50 times it seems to shoot great. I didn't want to shoot it much as it was heat treated on Saturday. I will finish tiller next week sometime. I would guess at my 27 inch draw it is pulling close to 70 lbs. I will tiller down to 60. Tips are right at 1/2. I debated on trying to go to 3/8 but this will be a hunting bow and it will get some serious use this summer/ fall.
A question for you guys about arrow pass.
My handle is 1 inch wide by 1.75 thick, it is triangular in shape with one side being for the most part straight the other side being slightly rounded. On the flat side the arrow touches near the front (back side of the bow) and on the other side it touches near the center of the handle. What way, in your experience makes it easier to tune the arrows for a bow of this type? I am going to put a small rest on the bow.
Thanks for looking/ advice,
I will post picts of it and the matching ladies bow I am making when they are done.
Greg