I have a sinew backed osage bow that I am very fond of - a while back I heated in some reflex-deflex and backed it with sinew as it was taking some set (it used to be a self bow). It is also a takedown. The bow is a little snakey and twisted, and of course with the sinew I cannot now heat treat it to straighten/ adjust it at all.
I feel that it is tillered ok and since the string sits to one side, I made this the side for the arrow shelf and rest. I am shooting arrow dynamics trad lite arrows which are normally very forgiving to shoot, yet I can't get them to fly straight or consistently.
I have tried the following:
1) really heavy/ light points
2) longer/ shorter shafts
3) building up the arrow shelf (to ridiculous amounts)
4) changing string height and nock point
And none of these things seem to make much difference.... yet ....
5) if I turn the bow upside down (see picture) (so it looks way off center shot), the arrows fly great.
Is this purely an arrow spine problem, or could it be that the bow prefers to be shot this way? It is a little uncomfortable, but the arrows do seem to zing out of it.
Am I going to mess up the tiller like this?
Do I just accept that this is how it turned out or are there any other solutions I am missing? Perhaps shortening a limb slightly...
Here are some pics...
Bow Right way round, with arrow on shelf
Bow turned upside down, with arrow shot off takedown handle/bow wood joint. Note it sticks out left and looks awkward.
Bow strung - right way round - note string is close to center shot of arrow rest.