Let me now take you on a journey into murky waters. Trapping a bow.
After careful inspection of the growth ring orientation I decided to take a chance and trap the bow. The back at the handle was taken to 1 1/4" with a straight taper to 1" at mid limb which continued till the line could go no further due to the eiffel tower shaped outer limbs.
After trapping I scrape the sharp edges and sand them down as I normally do with the edges on the back of the bow. Still at the floor tillering stage, the bow lost quite a bit of strength from the trapping and, with some more scraping, was ready for the tiller tree.
You can see that the bow was bending straight out of the handle which is bad on such a long bow. I marked about 7-8" away from the handle so I knew not to scrape there.
One thing to keep in mind with red oak is how it reacts to being scraped. Because the growth rings are so porous they can create low spots on the bow if not careful and result in dangerous hinges. Sometimes blatant run outs on the belly are hard to avoid when scraping. Just make sure to be careful around the area and if you notice that it gets low, DON'T TOUCH IT!!! Here is an example of what you might see on the belly.
Here are a few pics of the tiller developing.
I'm pretty happy with the tiller at this point but there are a few things I'm worried about. Still a little too much bend near the handle, there is some unevenness between where I've been trying to get the limbs to work and the tips and inner limb which have been fairly untouched, and I'm getting pretty close to full draw. Hopefully I'll have enough time to work these things out. As always, please comment, criticize or ask any questions you may have. Thanks for looking.