Somewhere along the line while I was just learning bow making, I (several times) came across the idea that you should shoot a bow about 200 times after tillering before you call it "done" and proceed to all of the fine detail and finishing work. The idea being: if it can make it past 200 shots, it can make it to 1000. And if it can make it to 1000, it should be able to make it well beyond.
A lot of things can happen as you shoot one in. The extra stress can bring out hidden flaws in the tiller, one limb can weaken, design flaws can expose themselves, weight can drop, set can increase dramatically -- and so on. And so the second idea is that: Should a bow fail in those early shots, it's best not to spend a lot of extra time on fine sanding, prettying up the tips/overlays, handles, staining, finishing, and so on.
The value in this was reinforced for me about a year ago. I had finished tillering a HHB bow. It was shooting beautifully, holding its shape, not taking any new set, holding its weight steady at 43# @ 28". And then on shot number 121 it lifted a huge splinter along the back. The problem was that it was a fairly high crowned stave. The design wasn't overstressed or pushing the limits, but obviously the wood just thought it too much.
Had I only flung a couple dozen arrows or so and called it good, this could have happened a week or two down the road after I had spent time prettying it up, and I would have been even more upset.
Now, I don't always shoot that many, but I try to get at least 100. The number is quite arbitrary, but 100-200 seems like enough time to get an honest impression of how the bow will behave. Very few of my bows have ended up in the hands of others, but as more of mine end up being traded, gifted, or sold away, I'd especially like to know that each one is solid before handing it off. Sometimes I can tell early that they are super solid, nothing is changing, and I have no reason to delay finishing any more. But sometimes even late they are still showing small tiller changes, etc.
And shooting it is different than just pulling it to full draw a bunch of times. It puts different stress on the wood that can't be replicated by pulling it on a tree hundreds of times.
As I read more and more posts, it seems that this practice is not as universal as I once thought. I've talked to, and even seen several people slapping a finish on after shooting just a few groups of arrows. I get the impression that some bowyers also try to limit any set the bow will take before handing it off to a customer or something, too, so when they get it it has the best performance possible -- even if it takes set and ends up with decrease performance later on. While I understand that, I also think it's slightly deceptive. "Hey, wood bows don't last forever."
I'm curious on others' thoughts on this, especially those who don't do it. And those who do, have you shared my experiences?