Thanks for all the feed back. Bin gone all day and just had a chance to post some more pics.
The correction is to thin the overly strong side of the limb. Then adjust tiller all over again, then sigh because your bow is now under weight, then....... Well I hope I'm wrong on all that last part. Ron
Thanks Ron, It is braced at about 50# so I have plenty to work with. I can start here and see what happens. If it works great, if not, I can try something else.
Can you show a unbraced side view,and a front profile view and how wide it is? You might be losing lateral stability as well to what m-p stated...
Here's some front views (sorry for the mess)
The tip furthest from the camera is the problem. It bends to the right when unbraced.
It measures 1 1/4" at the handle and gradually tapers to 1/2"at the overlay tips. It's 13/16" at the base of the recurve.
Can you show a unbraced side view,and a front profile view and how wide it is? You might be losing lateral stability as well to what m-p stated...
Thanks Blackhawk, can you expand a bit on the lateral stability?
Thanks Joec123able, check the pics, it's twisting pretty bad actually.
Check your side to side thickness for consistency.
PD, I think it's in the glue up not the tillering. I checked the belly and it's really flat and symmetrical from side to side throughout the length of the bow. How far out does it need to be to cause this much twist?
I think your right Bushboy, it was glued up a bit out of alignment. It wasn't as bad at first as it is now so maybe there's a compounded problem. If I pike it, I will lose the recurve so not sure I want to do that...yet!
Put some heat to it and start twisting. No good the way it is! Tite-bond glue will take more heat than you think. But it's probably not going to take all that much heat to get it to move. Luck............Art B
I'm thinking this would address the root cause but not sure if the laminate will make it Art. Have you done this before?
Yep aaron the take down is not a bad option and will be the final decision for sure.
I'm thinking if it's mainly caused by the glue up, I should heat straight first to address the main cause.
Does anyone have any guidance how to heat straighten a backed recurve with out breaking the bond on the bamboo?