I found this bow to be a real challenge for me. The tiller looks sort of wonky, but the bow shoots great. It had a natural whoopty-do and snake at the fade in the upper limb, so I made the arrow pass at that spot. It is an inch wide at the fades and tapers to a little less that 3/8" where the mahogany tips begin. The lower limb had another rollercoaster in it which gave the bow some deflex from the middle of the handle out to mid limb. I dry heated some reflex in the outer limbs with the heat gun, and I know it may look odd,but I believe the limbs are working pretty good. The top limb is an inch shorter than the snaky wonky bottom limb, but it resulted in a straight shooting, sweet on release, almost center shot 45lbs @ 26" bow. It is sixty inches nock to nock. I had a severe wind check that got into a big knot and I was worried enough about to wrap with some green B-50 and super glue. I put a similar wrap on the other limb just for a little cosmetic balance. This bow came from a dead osage tree that had been laying in the pasture about 20 years. I don't know what made me think there was a bow in there, but I am glad I stayed with this one. It is one of the most accurate bows that I have made so far.