I tend to get the middle of the bow moving slightly first (at full draw weight) and then get the rest of the limbs coming round.
Del
I do it mostly like this, but I guess I'm daft......
. Honestly, it has upped my averages both finishing bows without breaking them, and hitting weight, but it takes some experience (just a "feel", really) about how the bow is going to act based on length, species, design, width, and crown, etc.
I am usually drying staves pretty quickly, so have them roughed out to an approximate thickness (say, an inch) all along the limbs with a thicker handle. It's been clamped essentially straight, and it's roughed out to width.
I do a little floor tiller check just to see how MUCH too stiff it really is, and refine the thickness using a caliper all the way down the limbs. I start shaping the handle dips at the same time.
Once the thickness is very consistent (allowing for knots) I shape in the front profile to "outside of the line" and go to the consistent reduction method from the TBB. The method is to rough up the belly surface with a rasp, then use a scraper to remove ALL the rasp marks. Then I check for high spots or mistakes and do it again.
Next, I get the stave on the tree. Each rasp/scrape pass helps perfect the slope of the fades and removes a pound or two of draw weight. I may do a couple passes in a row at first. I check the bend on the tree, only the intended draw weight. Nothing moves at first. But, since the limbs are consistently thick and fades are shaped, I KNOW that the area right at the bottom of the fadeouts WILL bend first. Has to.
The instant I see any bend in those first few inches, I stop and catch the other limb up withe the same rasp and scrape routine. With both bending I get just a couple or three inches of tip movement, and the rest of the limb will look stiff and straight. I mark those bending areas (sometimes duct tape it) and don't touch until later. Then, I keep doing the same thing on the rest of the limb. The bend gradually sort of moves down the limb from middle to tips. As each section starts to bend, I stop rasping there and mark it, etc.. usually by the time I can get a string on, the limbs are mostly bending right and I just need to tweak them as I reduce weight and increase draw length.