IMO.
All good in theory, but for the average bloke making a bow the difference in those front profiles and tiller shapes is all but negligible. (And at a casual glance it's hard to spot the difference)
Especially if you start to factor in something like deliberately favouring stiff tips.
I've just spent ages helping a guy on an FB forum who was making 20# bows with a hinge in each limb. Finally got him to make one over 40# with no hinges... the front profile was 100% irrelevant.
Del
No Del it is also very good in practise!
If you don't practise it you will get excessive set and over/under strained wood
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Every piece of wood can bend a cewrtain distance before taking set.
Make it thinner it can bend further.
Thicker it can bend less before damage.
That is 'tiller logic' in a nutshell.
straight thickness taper eg. a pyramid, minimal thickness taper = no (or minimal!) change in bend radius.
parallel width limbs tave to taper in thickness = elliptical tiller. As you progress along the limb.....it gets thinner....right?
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Therefore the limb that is getting progressively thinner must also progressively bend further as it gets thinner.
Stiff tips etc don't alter the fact that wood takes set at a certain bend radius
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Maybe the difference is subtle but that doesn't matter the difference is there
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Just like the difference between a balanced car wheel. Take a couple of those weights off and see how well it works
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Front profile dictates tiller because of the above!
Front profile by definition cannot be irrelavent to tiller shape - the two are interrelated.
The wood doesn't think front view is 100% irrelavent.