I have recieved a PM from Dane, and he states he is very discouraged with some of the responses to his postings on this bow. Discouraged, in fact, to the extent that he may give up making bows, and certainly not posting anymore efforts here. I think as experienced bowyers, we have an obligation to encourage the efforts of new bowyers. I try to leave feedback in a first person context, stating: "If this was my bow, I might do this..." That way, the person recieving the feedback can either use it if it works for them, or disregard it if it doesn't, without feeling resentful or offended. I think, instead of saying something is not correct, we can say how we might make something better. Personally, I think Dane has done a pretty decent job of tillering this bow. The Holmegaard is a rather difficult tiller, and certainly not a beginners bow. Much contention swirls around this design, as to what is "right.''
As far as set goes, poor tiller is not the only factor. It is an important factor, but far from the only thing that will cause set. I recently finished a yew selfbow, 72" ntn, 50#@28". Nothing radical or demanding, but after finishing, the bow has 4" of set. The tiller is perfectly circular, with a bending handle and all portions of the limbs working. The problem was low density wood, and too much moisture. The stave was not as dry as I thought. Also, on a proper Holmegaard, I measure set at the end of the working limb portion only... not at the nock like is normally done. So, to me, Dane's bow does not appear to have more than the conventional 1" - 2" of set.
I also believe there are many ways to tiller a bow. Elliptical tiller, circular tiller, +/- tiller, symmetric limbs, asymmetric limbs... many options exist, but none are wrong. Some hard and fast rules do exist, but the fun thing about all this is, there are many interpretations.
I think we should applaud new members and their efforts, and offer feedback which is helpful, rather than offensive.