1. After floor tillering, I put the bow on the tiller tree using a string that hangs down to about where brace height would be
2. I apply enough pressure to expose any areas that are not even I try to make the two limbs match each other.
3. If the bow looks even I pull all the way to full draw weight even though it might only move a few inches.
4. I continue to scrape, adjust and lower poundage testing at full draw weight with each pull until I reach a point 4" short of my target draw length at which time I brace the bow.
5. Thats it.
That kind of sounds like what I do... except I have no idea what I'm doing or why, or what to look for while doing it or when to stop
After floor tiller, I put the long string on, which usually hangs down to brace height because I was trying to make the string the same length as the bow, but by the time I got the knot right and the B50 stretched it hangs down a bit
I pull on it and try to see what's wrong... I know SOMETHINGS wrong, but I stand for for awhile pulling on it trying to figure it out. Just choosing which limb is worse is a pretty big achievement.
If the bow looks like it won't explode, I pull to full draw weight, which for me is 35 - 50lb for my first attempts
(Note the inconsistent target weight
)
I continue to remove wood, sometimes in the wrong places, and poundage definitely lowers, I'll tell you that much. I decided to brace the last one at about 22 inches, so I was a bit late there.
That's it
It is encouraging, I guess, to know that my approach will probably work once I actually know what I'm doing.