+1 for Pat, aj, and badger. Let me tell you something from experience with this topic. I once made a bow for a guy I worked with, who claimed he had shot traditional bows before and wanted to pay me to make him one, so I agreed. He told me his draw length was 28". I made him a bamboo-backed hickory with an arrow shelf, around 65" long, tiller was spot-on. I shot the bow around 100 times. When I brought it to him to try it out to see if the draw weight was what he wanted before I finished out the bow, he pointed the bow in the air, drew the bow all the way back to the back of his ear, and **snap**. The distance from the corner of his mouth to the back of his ear was at least 3 inches, maybe 4. Hickory can take a lot of punishment, and at 65" you'd think that it would be fine, but I tillered that thing out to 28", and being taken out to 30 or 31" broke the bow. Unless you have a 26"-27" arrow for that bow, I wouldn't let anyone else with a longer draw length shoot it. You could let them, but only allow them to use the 26"-27" arrows in the bow. If that hadn't broke, I can guarantee you that an overdraw like that would have caused a lot of set afterwards.