I may have just screwed up royally!!!
I discovered that my first osage selfbow had a design flaw. I had it tillered good and I was noticing a heavy arrow slap and fishtailing arrows while shooting it in. Well, after pulling a string along its length unbraced (belly-up), I noticed the string falling to the right side of the handle. It would be way better being a left handed bow where the string was.
Well, I decided to try and move the string over to the left side of the handle to make it work better for me (right handed shooter). I noticed a curve that I could straighten about 1/2 way the top limb ... and figured that if i worked on that curve, it would slide the tip over some to help align better the string.
After carefully heating and bending it, I have the unbraced string doing what I want, but I am not sure of the consequences of heating and bending a tillered limb. Hopefully there will be no ill effects, but I suppose the worst case scenario would be me having to re-tiller the bow? It is fairly stout and if i have to loose some pounds reworking the limb, that will be OK, but I'd rather have a bow that shoots well than one that shoots kind-of crappy because of string misalignment.
The weird thing is ... I checked that earlier in the process, and it was fine ... would it have moved around some during the stresses of tillering and shooting in?