OK, so I just finished going through Dean Torges' book again: "Hunting the Osage Bow" and I was particularly impressed with his "faceted tillering" technique, so I gave it a go on a hickory backed white oak bow I had glued up.
So far, what you can see in the first picture is my CAD impression of what he was talking about. It's just a rendering that I pinned up in my shop to keep me on track while I was working.
The pictures of the bow are after I have worked it down a bit. Since my white oak was 3/4" thick, and my hickory was 1/8" thick, what you see is the faceted tillering after it has been sanded down to 3/4" thick - hence the flat on the top. (I've penciled in a little on the edges so they're more visible in the shot) I did all of the work with an angle grinder with a 40 grit sanding disk. Yeah, there's a few bumps, but I've still got a lot of work to do, as it's not near floor tillered at all at this point, so I figured a few imprefections are OK.
Here's the takeaway (assuming I've done this correctly) this is a much faster way of initially reducing the bow stave into something that is workable. In 30 minutes, I've done what took me... Well, I'm ashamed to say HOW long it took me before with hand tools. AND, because I've still got wood to remove, the slight imperfections remaining will be worked out later. And, the technique produces a bow with a much more natural ovoid cross section.
Thoughts???