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Based on your description im not sure that the rawhide job was the culprit. But i have backed almost everybow ive made for the cheap insurance it provides, or for artwork. Ive used exclusively Titebond3. First sand the back and acetone it to remove all oils. If im heat bending the wood with oil, i do that first then make sure and remove that contaminated wood down to fresh wood and then acetone it. Then mix a small cup of thinned down water and glue(approx two thirds glue). You coat the back of the bow with this and let it dry. You do this 2-3 times. Your rawhide has been soaking for an hour or so and its now fully hydrated. You scrape the backside with a knife against a board to remove any gunk/hair/membrane. Put glue on the rawhide, smear it all over. Lay it on the bow and starting from the grip work your finger all the way down removing any air pockets. Wrap it in ace bandage letting it cure for an hour or so(meanwhile you do the other side). After an hour remove the the bandage carefully, as the glue has now thickened but is still tacky enough you can make adjustments if necessary. After this you are supposed to put the ace bandage back on to let it set over night but i have found this step unnecessary. By morning you can ususlly rasp the sides. In 2 days time its hard like a rock. I try and wait 10 days or so for the wood to cure back out. Out of eveything on bow building that i have messed up along the way, this method has worked 100% of the time. I learned it from Mike Yancys video. I would still like to learn the method of hide glue better, and become as comfortable with its results. But TB3 is waterproof and has been a fool proof method so far.
+1 I've read on a few glue sites that glue doesn't stick to dried glue that well. Some people size the surface, let it get tacky and then apply more glue and assemble. That makes more sense to me. Have you ever noticed that re-gluing a chair leg by squirting more glue in never seems to work.