Heh guys,
I'm working on a red elm stave and it had a natural reflex in one limb and is pretty straight on the other limb. I want this to be unbacked bow, my first instinct would be to steam the straight limb and bend it to match the other limb but I'm wondering if there's a better way to do it? Can I use direct heat to accomplish this, like a heat gun? Also, I worked the limbs' thickness down to about 3/4" all along their length, the straighter limb is slightly thicker right now, should I trim the thickness so it is like 3/4" from the fade-outs, 5/8" at mid limb and 3/8" at the tip or should I let the tillering process handle that? My goal is a 55 lb bow at 28" at 66" ttt, 64" ntn, right now its length is 70", I left it this long just in case, and its limb width from flares to mid-limb is 1 3/4", where it then tapers to 1/2", I have left the handle full width for now as well. Your replies and advice are greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Aaron
p.s. the board in the pic is only to compare straightness