PeteC- I gotta say, I disagree. I recently built an absolutely AWFUL sassafras ELB. I tried mixing different dimenisons, backed it with an ugly flower print cotton sheet, and messed the tiller up
really badly. The tips were much too wide for best speed, and it had been tillered so horribley elliptically at first that only the mid limbs had set- alot of it. Even so, the finished 65# bow shot really well all things taken into consideration. It wasn't that great, but I put all that on me. Not the wood.
The bow here is way overstressed. It's got about 8" or so of non-working handle, is short, and narrow. Not to mention unbacked for a "tension weak wood". However, after being broken in, it still stores a fair bit of energy, and is doing fine. The tiller is better, but the entire bow could have been done better from the start. My fault. Not the wood's. I've got an ELB stave, proper dimensions, of sassafras drying now. I'll get back to you on how well it also works for longbows. I'm also going to have to try another flatbow from this stuff, overbuilt, as it seems rather stiff for its weight.
But I coudl be just blowing smoke out my rear, since the bow isn't even done yet
.
Anyway. In addition to reflexing the tips, which would have, as tom sawyer pointed out, WAY overstressed the already pushed inner limbs, I also narrowed them dramatically. I left 1" of set from the tips in, so I'm hoping more to boost the final speed with light narrowed tips instead of the R/D design. Fingers crossed, she's tunring into a ral little beauty queen here.