Thanks stick bender, willie, legionnaire, and dragonman!
Willie, TB3, and i masked the sections off, combed the flax, and laid it in place with a brush, saturating fibers. Fibers ar left full length, so a number of wraps to build to thickness desired.
Dave, I think it looks good, but that is a matter (always) of personal opinion. Stickbows of any sort look dodgy to many people shooting compounds, glass bows, etc. As do character bows, stone and reed arrows, etc. I don't think this is dodgy, but that's just me.
My specific reasons for particular design choices are already given from post one onwards, but let me just repeat the overall reason, also from post #1:
"I was going to do a straight handle for safety sake, but got caught up half way through roughing it out with a strong desire to do it with the original set back type. I do know what that means in terms of grain violation risk. But I have a few ideas I want to try out to make it more likely to hold together. Since it's a board bow, I'm piecing the handle with a riser. I'm going to try for 50# @ 28" -- I do know the original was likely much more than that, and I'm not making an efficient bow. But I'm doing this for the fun of it, the interest, and just a whole bunch of long time curiosity."
As far as complicating the design, since the original Meare Heath bow had a carved out handle, not bent, not paying attention to ring orientation in any way, anywhere along the back, the ring violations are severe. The back appears steeply cambered -- far beyond the original ring camber.
It apparently had many rawhide bands and crossed reinforcements -- some say for appearance, others as working reinforcement. The original is also broken at the handle. Some say for purposeful reasons, others for structural reasons. Some people consider the MH design a very poor one, with apparently too long and heavy limbs for good performance, along structural deficiencies.
I'm very curious about all of this, and one way of finding out (which is how I like to do things) is by experimenting with these problems oneself. I want to see what happens, on my own bow, if I do something similar. Not the same obviously, in some respects, but similar enough to me to satisfy my curiosity on the points I'm personally interested in.
I do not mean to mislead newbies, or promote what I'm trying as good practice, or suggest that this is the only way to connect two limbs, or that it is a superior way. I'm just doing this because it appeals to me to do it. People will certainly draw their own conclusions, and that's fine. Gives us all something to talk about, yes? And I am sure that it will be a good learning experience not only for me, whether or not a good bow results, but for anyone interested enough to continue to read this thread about something different from the norm (whatever that might be!)
I do know that your well wishes are truly meant, and I think you're a fine and admirable bowyer.