Hi medicinewheel
Thanks for your input. Initially, I felt the same way as you. But I'm using newbie logic, which may be wrong. Thats why I'm here. This is the first of its kind, mistakes have been made. First mistake, rounding the limb edges before assembly. This produced some of the poor joints you rightly mentioned. The solution is assemble first. The other poor joints are newbie mistakes and will be fixed with more practise. Time will tell whether the other dangers you mentioned are justified. I use tb3 glue. I've seen it demonstrated on youtube, the wood on a joint breaks before the glue does. So broadly speaking, the glue welds the wood together. So in effect the handle becomes a solid piece. In my earlier reply post, I spoke about an incident when my tillering string broke. It seems to support my logic. Again my newbie logic may be wrong. As regards endangering other people. If the bow breaks, it will make a big bang, maybe snap in two. But I don't agree that it will shower everyone around me with shrapnel. But if my wood welding logic is wrong, who knows what will happen? But please, I value all input, it can only help me.