My first bows were board bows, figured that it was the cheapest way to learn on. Also better to mess up a bow that I had under $10 in versus a stave that I had bought. As a newbee, there are so many things to consider, most of which are not even thought of. Even though I had watched several videos on each step of the build, I still failed to grasp the importance of several things. I didn't really understand what or how the floor tiller show be or really look like. The big deal to me was tillering, it was the most important part. So, as I went to use the long string for it's portion of the tillering, I did several things wrong. 1st, had too long of a string and 2nd, got in too big of a hurry then 3rd, used the long string too much. So, I ended up with a false tiller as it didn't look or act anything like the real tillering should have. The video of Swiftbows explained the reason why I had failed so terribly. I was drawing the limbs in a manner that the bow would never be drawn. From what I could tell, this affected several things, including bow draw weight. So now I use a much shorter long string, that is even tight but not full braced or even halfway braced. So now I will get a truer reading of the limbs. Also I am taking my time and really inspecting everything more closely before I remove more wood. Speed is not my friend, at least not yet, maybe later down the road. I am about making a bow worthy of hunting with and one to be proud of.