Nothing inconsistent in what I said Del. From my experience the trunk wood is the strongest part of the tree vs it's upper section. You build a bow as it "stands in the tree" (and most of us do whether we realize it or not) and more than not the upper limb will be the one most likely to break. Not a theory, or an assertion, just common sense..............Art
You obviously haven't read what you actually wrote....
Trunk end of the tree will be denser, stronger and have fewer defects. As you move up the tree the reverse is true.Can't you see the inconsistency created by the second sentence?
And as for the 'most of us do it, whether we realize it or not' is arrant nonsense. I quite often will reverse a bow in the process of making it, or even after it's virtually finished. Oh I get it! You'll now say I'm switching it to trunk end down subcosciously and thus proving your point
.
Tell you what, You sit and have a cup of coffee, I'll do your arguing for you......
ok... never mind... I can't be bothered.
I wish people would be more careful with their words and and manage to have a concise logical discussion, asking and answering points in an ordered manner.
Just ain't going to happen.
The interesting thing for me in this thread is how a few people have experssed doubt about the received wisdom of positive tiller. I've always been sceptical myself and only started using it when I had a lower limb go weak on an Ash flatbow.
Del