Jim, good question, thats one of the reasons I am doing a build along or possibly several of them is to hopefully see what kind of questions come up. What might seem clear to me might be really confusing to someone else not familair with it.
Ok on this elb I am working on now. I randomly selected a demension of 72" long and 1 1/8 wide at the handle. An elb has certain guidlines it has to meet, The belly need to be rounded starting from the back and it also has to meet a 5/8 rule of thickness, meaning the thickness cannot be less than 5/8 of the width. On this particular bow I simply glued it together, and then this morning I went out and just ground it out on the belt sander to meet the 5/8 rule and got the tiller pretty close with no pre determination on draw weight. ( i will post pics in about an hour) anyway after cleaning the bow up and re weighing it I find the bow weighs 22 oz. A boo backed bow can easily go about 10% less than what the calculator spits out so I go from there. I know now that after final tillering the bow will come in around 20 oz. I simply go back to my calculator and feed some numbers into it to see what poundage, draw length and tiller style would best fit this bow. Elbs have 3 basic designs a sporting tiller, a flight tiller and a war bow tiller. ( elb enthusiasts correct me here if I am wrong) If I use a war bow tiller for instance I would feed numbers in that allow for an arc of the circle tiller. This would be a 0 for stiff handle and fade area and would have a full working handle. The warbow tiller would allow me to build about a 100# bow from this stave and draw it to 30". If I decided on the sporting tiller I would leave the center 8" on the stiff side although they would still have some flex so i would use a 4" figure for stiff handle and fades and this would allow me about an 80# bow for 20 oz. Now if I choose a flight tiller I would keep the center 16" on the stiff side but still flexing so I would use an 8" figure for stiff handle and fades and this would allow me about a 70# bow at 28". Nothing has to be exact here but the formula is giving me a good idea of what I have to work with. I don't have to have any knowledge of this wood as long as I know it is true bow wood to carry out these designs and feel certain of a good performing safe bow. Now it just so happens that I do have some prior experience with this particular specimen of wood and I know it can be pushed safely a little beyond what the formula calls for. So I will actually go for something inbetween the sporting and the flight tiller and look for a finish draw weight of about 80# and a mass weight of 20 oz, possibly 19 oz if I feel lucky. Steve