I made a beautiful BBO a while back, with a recent shoulder injury I decided to drop its poundage to a comfortable level for me to shoot. I never really shot the bow in as I was making it for someone else and missed poundage.
It was one of those bows that the tiller would look really good for a while then one limb would start to creep negative and get out of tiller. I would correct the errant limb with sandpaper only but it just wouldn't hold tiller.
When tillered the bow was hard to shoot, when the tiller got out even slightly it was a really lousy shooter, 1/8" positive or negative and made a world of difference.
I pride myself in being able to correct or fix just about anything but this one had me stumped. I could run the gizmo within a hair of each limb and not make a mark.
Today I took a closer look and realized the fade on the bottom limb wasn't quite as active as the fade on the top limb, we are talking microns here. I also noticed in my hand the grip felt a little too sharp at the peak which made the bow easy to torque. I had used a contour gage to shape the curve and get it even, it was perfectly round but at too high an arc.
Out with my orbital sander for the limb and a scraper for the handle. I took off a tiny bit of wood from the fade and lowered the arch on the handle.
Out for a test shot and I couldn't believe the difference, suddenly my loser became a winner with every arrow going right where I looked, a difficult bow suddenly became forgiving.
The light spots indicate where I corrected things with almost no wood removal required.
What have you guys stumbled into to make a dog of a shooter into a winner?