Since you're retiring soon Ol' Man, maybe you can now pay closer attention
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Hey, you start with reasonably (quality) bow wood, apply a nice taper, so what could go wrong? Limb can't hinge, and you can tug on the limbs until they break. But that'll take a bit of tugging.
Now for different working properties/strengths, why I reckon carrying the same amount of mass in each limb will help there. Try this Roy: mark the center of your bow. As you're tillering, make sure your bow balances on your center mark. That'll keep your limb mass equal. Then you'll start to understand why the old timers preferred matching sister billets for their bows.
Say you "build a bow as it stands in the tree", and maintain equal limb mass as your building it. Here's what you're gone to see. Top limb a bit thicker and wider than the bottom, or bottom limb a bit narrower and thinner than the top. Do the same thing with matching sister billets and you have a more aesthetic pleasing bow. Easier to work with matching limb properties, at least for me.
If this make any sense to you Roy, I don't believe a bow should be pulled the first time until everything possible is done to insure minimal damage to the wood's fibers. Only way I can see to do that is to pre-taper the limbs instead of tapering/pulling as you go.
Something else I was going to mention. But heck, you know how that works at our age
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