Bownarra, have you read Dean Torges's writings or just offering an opinion? He recommended making the patch a little undersized and leaving an excess amount of glue in under the patch, I followed his directions to a T.
Tell me about all the similar patches you have tried and what the outcome was.
Like I said before, If I haven't done it I don't say a word when a question comes up. I think the guys who ask a question deserve an answer from someone with actual experience, not opinions.
I have to agree with the tillering on that bow, spot on. As for superglue, you are right if the crack is microscopic, the glue won't wick in. One property of super glue is soaks in the surrounding area a hardens it, like case hardening making it less likely the crack will spread.
For maximum wicking I used to keep a bottle of the thinnest Zap-A-Gap superglue on hand, it is thinner than water and soaks right in.
The last time I posted that property on a muzzle loader form about crack fixing I got the horse laugh from the so called experts like we see here sometimes.
One of my critics went so far as to call the company that made a particular brand of super glue and ask a tech rep about what I had posted. Surprise, surprise, the tech rep told him "yes, that is a property of our glue that we have never emphasized".
I didn't read about this superglue property, I found it out from fixing cracks in bows and flintlock rifle stocks.
If any of you have used superglue and sawdust as a filler/patch you will see the chemical reaction between the two, lots of heat and even smoke, the superglue is changing the composition of the wood.
Here is an example, not bow related but it is wood; I bought a M/L kit (Kibler SMR) at a bargain price, when I got the kit I found the previous owner had neglected to mention there was 2 1/2"crack in the forestock. Apparently he didn't know how to remove the barrel and had yanked it out cracking the stock.
The wood was very thin at the crack, I superglued the crack and held it closed with my fingers until the glue set, I knew this probably wouldn't hold so I went inside the barrel channel and soaked all the wood in a 1 1/2" circle around the crack with as much superglue as the wood would suck up. After the glue set the wood was so hard a chisel wouldn't cut it. This crack will never turn loose.
The crack is above the pin angled down to the left, fixed properly it is hard to see.