OK, this is kindof a follow up to my earlier questions on faceted tillering. The faceted tillering method worked, but as I shaved down the belly of the bow, it was floor tillered when the bow was 5/8" thick consistent thickness, so I've decided to just rough cut my bows at that thickness, then the tillering process can be handeled quickly with a random orbital sander and 60 grit paper... MUCH easier that way...
Anyway, the resultant bow was hickory backed white oak. The white oak was beautiful quarter sawn, but my hickory was a P.O.S.
I was experimenting with a few things though, so in the end I figured it didn't really matter.
1-1/2" wide from fades to mid-limb, then tapered to 1/2" nocks. Purpleheart tip overlays. It was about 5/8" thick at the fades, tapering to around 3/8" at the nocks, and pulled an easy 35# at 28". It was a really fast shooter too! (Sorry no pics or video there, I didn't want to get too attached to it since I was going to be destruction testing it)
Since I haven't used white oak before, I decided to do a break-test. As you can see from the "Not Split" to the "Split" pictures, it took a LOT of bend before the crappy hickory gave up. The white oak, although it took a lot of set, it only showed minor compression fractures.
Well, chalk this one up to one of the "GREAT" woods to use...
Cheers!