(Sorry in advance that this port turned into a novel!)
I'm working on a bendy handle osage shorty that I hope to shoot in at the classic next week.
51" ntn, aiming for 48# or so at 27". Heated to about 2.5" reflex. Right now it's braced about an half inch low and pulling 45# at 19". It's getting down to it and, of course, playing tricks on my eyes.
Here it is unbraced and braced. You can see in the unbraced pic that the limb on the left has taken more set than the limb on the right, and the reflex looks uneven here. I think this is part of what makes its brace profile look so awful, which is also accentuated by my crooked fence.
It seems like I could remove wood on the outer portion of the right limb to match the profile, but I also feel like with the different amounts of reflex, the limbs are currently bending the same amount.
Here it is from various perspectives on the tillering tree. Problem limb on the right:
And here it is being held at about 19" in the hand. Problem limb on the top:
This is also my first bendy handle and it seems like if I slightly move where the bow hand holds the handle, it drastically changes the profile. I can shift my bow arm's hand down a few mm when holding it in a reflection and it makes the tiller look awesome.
I stopped tillering at this point today because I wanted to slow down and think about it. Right now my plan is to scrape the stiff spot in the upper limb (right limb on the tillering tree) until it matches the profile of the lower limb. Then slowly take it down to weight with sandpaper from there.
What would you guys do? There may be a cold one in it for your help if you're at the classic next week