Arvin,
I think we have the force draw curve covered. I will double check when I get home this weekend.
The thing about full sized bend curve drawings is the special printer need to make 3 foot prints with accuracy. I am guessing that is something Alan does where he works. And there is also the file type that the bow program generates to feed to the printer....it has to be compatible. I will look at that also when I get Vbow installed on my new laptop.
The wider stave sound like it may make it easy to get the test sample or maybe more, unless...
Were you hoping to get 2 bows out of it?
Do you have access to a nice table saw? A shop type table saw with a decent fence will work with care. The important thing is to be able to rip a slat with a uniform thickness. I will take post some pics of doing it on my saw with a stave I have here and work out some test sample dimensions if you want to move foreward.
The general plan is to rip a thiner slat and make a few test samples, something that can be tapered to a point on each end. A long dimond shaped bend in the handle pyramid mini bow if you will. Then do some bend tests on the tiller tree and use Vbow to reverse design and give us good numbers for the wood. Actually a bit of time spent on the test sample will be worthwhile. Doing some testing on the sample at the working moisture content and testing again after the sample sees some heat treatment and possibly rounding the slat to approximate the crossection of the finished bow and testing a third time.
Do you have a decent scale for the tiller tree that can read weights down to ounces? a digital?
I would really like a thread like that, it would help me understand better how to design a bow specifically for any stave
Take a look at
https://www.virtualbow.org/ for its capabilities and for a peek at the visual outputs.
If you have difficulties installing, please post as if I remember correctly, some guys had it working well and some had install issues a few years back when there was a similar discussion.