Made myself a hotbox to speed the drying. made it approx 75" long, 18" high and 12" wide, wired up 2 x 75 watt incandescent light bulbs in the bottom, connected to a STC-1000 temperature controller from my beer fridge. Kept it as 40 deg for almost 2 weeks, weighing the wood twice daily as I do not have a moisture meter. It was losing 10 grams a day, a few days ago I got frustrated and wondered if it wasn't getting too dry. Took it out and left it in the lounge room to check, and lo and behold it started gaining weight - grr guess I over did it. Still, it wasn't too bad, it stabilized after 2 days, only over dried it by about 10 grams on a 1400 gram stave.
Also have made myself a better tillering tree, one with a pulley system. I made it with 3 pulleys to give myself a mechanical advantage, and as such it only takes me 25 lb effort to apply 50 lb to the bow. Bought a spring scale for it too. Could use some paint perhaps, but it'll do for now
Have started to tiller the stave as well
having a few small challenges though.
I made the mistake of tapering the tips and roughing out the handle close to its finished size before the wood had fully dried. I found that as it finished drying, one limb has warped sideways a little, and now with a tillering string on it the string is not centered down the grip. It's now about 1/2 inch off the center of the grip, but still inside the finished grip. The grip wants to rotate in the tillering tree as I work, I can stop it from doing fairly easily though.
Lesson learned - will not make that mistake again. Not sure if it will affect how the bow shoots, figured I'd just make that limb the top one and have the string close to the outside of the grip - will that be a problem? If so, the bow is pretty long (70 inch ntn, but as a bigger fella I do have a 30" draw), maybe I could shave an inch off each side and re adjust the nocks. Alternatively, I could make it say 64" ntn, and sinew back it?
The wood is very hard, and now its dry I have no bladed tools that work on it. Everything skates off the surface, or tries to bite in then make ripples, so I'm down to one rasp which works well but is frustratingly slow. Still, I am enjoying the process overall so its not a huge deal.
Also, the wood is a little snakey on one limb, not sure why as the trunk was as straight as you could want before I cut it and took the sapwood off it. Not a warstopper either, but it's first time I've worked on tillering a snakey limb. There's plenty of literature on how to do it though, so it's just a matter of me learning as I go and hoping for the best. The snakey bit at the fade is worrying me, because I don't understand the mechanics of it very well. Will probably post a few pics up for advice as I go, if anyone doesn't mind helping me.
Here's a pic of where I'm at right now
On the long tillering string, I have the limb tips moving probably 3-4 inches right now. Not enough to string yet, but hopefully will get there tomorrow afternoon!