It really is very simple.
You put different forces on the bow limbs when you draw the bow by hand.
Bow hand pressure point and the point where you actually pull the string from are what you need to think about and their relation with where actual measured center is on the bow.
Tiller you bow to bend evenly and be balanced at full draw and the lower limb needs to be stiffer.
It really is as simple as that.
I don't understand what you are all talking about! Just tiller the darned bow to be balanced in the hand at full draw.
This is, always has been and always should be the way to tiller a bow.
I'm saying no more.
Come on Mike, if it were that simple , the monkeys would rule the world (not sure they don't right now
) I know you said you weren't saying any more ,but............................. you didn't give a reason for why you want the bottom limb to be stiffer. Now we are falling back into the dangerous territory of " we've always done it that way." I'm not saying it's wrong , It's just that no one has convinced me that it's right.
My statement was directed at Pat with equal length limbs in mind, what I usually make with a stiff handle bow. Taking a stave with no character and tillering it out so that it stays still in the hand while drawing will usually result in a slight positive tiller. Pat has come and clarified his statement saying that he was referring to unequal length limbs such as longbows, to which I still disagree.
In any case, I agree with Mike. Hand pressure and how you draw make a difference
If I'm reading correctly , and it is difficult to sometimes decipher the nuances of our language in type, you and Pat are coming to the same conclusion from different angles. If your stiff handle bow that balances in the hand (I'm assuming the bow hand is in the dimensional center?) is longer below that point to the fades than it is above that point to the top fade ,the bottom limb is shorter . If it is tillered on a tree while clamped ( stiff handle not moving) and the limbs were tillered to bend the same distance at the tips, the bottom limb will be under more stress.(because of it's length).
Now, when you take it off the tree, it will pivot in the hand because you changed the pivot point thus giving you a positive tiller and a weaker top limb.
But ,you now have a weaker top limb ! Not only that, but the bow is tilting forward at full draw. Mike had mentioned that he tillers his the same. I'm assuming that his bottom limb/relation to center is the same as Marc's thus giving the same result. This all agrees with what PatM said in the first statement, I believe.
Sorry but it still doesn't provide sound reason to make the bottom limb shorter from fade to nock and make it stiffer to compensate. I'm not saying it doesn't work , it obviously does . I've been building them the same. But the top limb is obviously now the weak link in the chain , instead of taking it's share of the load. This would seem to be the answer to Del's question of why they break on the top limb .
When it comes down to wood bows breaking, the sad truth is , they will all eventually break . If they didn't , we would have a huge array of historical examples to learn from. The ones that get used , break. The better the stress is distributed the longer it will last. The bows Del is talking about at his club likely get used very often (once a week?) Most of us don't get the chance to do that . Some of us own several bows and change it up even if we do go often.
Now ,...... what problem would there be with truly tillering the limbs the same. I can't see any ,but maybe I'm missing something. I can only think that it would add longevity and shoot as well or better.
Arguments for and against would be appreciated, even if hypothetical.