Working on my 2nd mulberry - this one being a rigid handle, 2" wide parallel limb, tapering to 1/2" at tips, 64" ntn. Had to straighten it a bit and remove a twist - used some oil and heat gun - did this after floor tiller. Continued to tiller out to 27" @ 54#. I shot maybe 10-12 arrows and it had some handshock. I worked the tips a bit and shaped them down to see how it affected the hand shock. Went back out to shoot and on my 3rd shot this happened....lower limb.
Just wanted some opinion on cause. The back was worked down to a single ring - a small ring violation right at the tip past the string nock is all. The tiller was looking good and the limbs were bending evenly. Worked the limbs gently and often during tiller. Using a tillering pulley system and never held the bow at a long draw for more than a few seconds at a time.
I was thinking maybe I worked it too soon after heating and straightening and was too dry and brittle?
It does have fairly thin rings so maybe 54# was just too much?
I borrowed a moisture meter and measured the moisture at 7% in the broken limb. A different piece of mulberry in the same room was 10%. Some hickory laying in the room was 7% for reference. (Not sure if the meter is accurate or not?)
What you think?