When recovering a failed bow you do what you have to do, many here would say " I put failures in the burn pile", some I do, some I don't, when I want a challenge.
A little on the bow I show above;
I quit selling bows about 10 years ago, I realized there were several guys out the that worked tirelessly for free at tournaments helping out and never got the recognition they deserved.
Chad Weaver was just such a guy, he was on the go from daylight until dark at the tournaments at Enid Ms. Now Chad is BIG guy and would make two of us normal folk, he also has a crushed ankle that never properly healed that caused him a lot of grief. In spite of this, he endured the pain and never slowed down.
I call these bows "thank you bows" and Chad deserved one. He has at least a 31" draw, the first bow had a bamboo failure shortly after I gave it to him. He loved the bow and the way the handle fit him so I didn't want to make a new bow, just restore the one I gave him initially.
He got the same bow back as I gave him initially, just a little better one this time.