I would not make a very good politician--because I believe in 'fessing up, even when the truth hurts. I had got my 70 inch red oak pyramid board bow to the tillering stage and it was bending evenly and at 20 inch draw, appeared to be headed for about 55 # @ 28". I was getting some outstanding hands-on tutoring from Bubby, but I now realize, looking at that fatal last picture, that I failed miserably in following his advice.
I needed to take more wood off from mid-limb out, but I now know I did not take enough off those areas before working the bow up to FD. I got it on the stick, cranked it up to 28 (exercising it faithfully at every change, mind you, but as I looked at it, it began to make noises like a squirrel that has gobbled down half a pound of dried pinto beans. 😳. So I pulled it quickly off the tillering stick, and examined it--no splinters. But when I tried it on the bathroom scale, it was between 35 and 38# @ 28".
It was obvious that something had gone very wrong down inside the wood. I considered halting the build and backing the bow--but decided I wanted to see what was going on. So I put it back in the stick at 28"--for photo, and...Mount Saint Helens!😝
She broke in the fade of what was to be the lower limb. Clean break--no sign of what I would think tension would do to it--splitting the limb lengthwise--instead, the break went straight through from back to belly.
Bub suggested perhaps it was due to dry rot--but there was no white powdery substance in evidence.? The wood did look darned dry, and there were tiny perforations when you looked at either piece, head on into the small, quarter-sawn growth rings.
But my theory at this point is that the near-handle wood was just having to work too hard due to the fact that I had not thinned down the outer limbs enough to get them into the act and helping--prior to going to 28".
My new plan is to follow the dimensions of your build-along, Bubby. And it turns out I was wrong when I said the nearest source of maple and hickory boards was 200 miles away in Austin or Houston. A small town 45 miles to the north has a hardwood store--so in January, I will try a different wood and build it a little shorter and a full 2 inches wide. Oh, and tiller a lot more gingerly! That sucker may be whip-ended when I get through taking wood off! 😊
Cheers,
Russ