Heh guys,
I started using a tillering gizmo about two years ago and I can say that it has helped me find stiff spots better but I have been making a lot of bows way too light lately and its making me think that I am using it wrong. I have been using it to find stiff spots by starting out so I can barely feel the tip of the screw poking through the block of wood and then I slide the gizmo down the limb. If the screw scratches a spot, I remove wood at the stiff spot, exercise the stave, check the tiller, then run the gizmo down the limb again and I repeat this process until the stiff spot is gone. As I pull the bow further, I bring the screw out further because the limb is bending more and the gizmo can travel further down the limb, at least I thought that was how it was supposed to be used. Is this how it is supposed to used? I have been making a lot of bows way too light lately and I think its because I'm removing too much wood during tillering, I don't think its a design mistake. For the past year the bow I have been trying to make is a 72" long, 55#@28" D-bow out of red oak, 1 3/8" or 1 1/2" wide at the grip and it maintains that length up to half of the bow's limb, where it then tapers to 1/2" nocks but my bows lately haven't been able to pull 20 lbs. A week or two ago, I shortened a stave down to 64" and it finally pulled 22 lbs but I thought the tiller needed to be adjusted and after that adjustment it no longer pulled 22 lbs. Based on the experience of other bowyers, at least 50 lbs should be doable at those dimensions and I've heard of bowyers getting more weight at even narrower widths with whitewoods. I thought there was a thread somewhere that gave details on how to use the tillering gizmo on here but I couldn't find it. My explanation of my problem might be hard to follow, I'm having a hard time putting it to words, so I'll just sum it up with one question: How do you use the tillering gizmo? Any advice and critiques you can give is greatly appreciated.
Thank you,
Aaron