I am blessed with a shop full of power tools, but this week it dawned on me which one I use the most in my bow and arrow building. If I were a brand new bowyer on a tight budget and a small work shop, and could only afford one good power tool, it would be a good belt/disc sander. I enjoy splitting staves from logs, and roughing the profiles down with a hatchet, and hogging off wood with my farrier's rasp. I have three hacksaw blades taped together and a chainsaw file that makes short work of my string nocks. Working with hand tools is enjoyable for me and I could make it without my bandsaw, table saw, etc., but that belt sander is my go to. Shaping handles, reducing limbs to side profiles, tillering down to longstringing, shaping tips, the list goes on. Tapering arrows, sanding, making field points from nails, sharpening trade points, etc... Belt sander. Best money I have spent on a power tool. It takes a little practice and you have to be cautious or you can sure remove too much wood and ruin a stave in a heartbeat, but most of your rough tillering can be done with it. Once I am to floor tiller or long string then I alternate between rasp and scraper, finishing off with scraper. My belt sander saves my elbows from the scorching case of tennis elbow that I have in both arms from all that rasping. It is the one tool that keeps me building bows in spite of the inflammation. I think new bowyers fixate on getting that big band saw, and I agree they sure are nice, but give a good bench style belt/disc sander combo some thought. You can do a lot with it.