Just wanted to finish this thread off even though the bow handle experiment failed.
A check of weight showed the bow gained 5 grams outside the first day, then zero grams for two days after that, so I brought it inside and continued work on it. I asked my wife to take a tillering pic of the bow so I could see it when I first started working on it after bracing. It's now the only photo of the bow intact. (Bottom pic).
I continued tillering, and I eventually had it short drawing to 50# and even tried it outside for a dozen arrows or so. But on the tree when just short of full draw (27") I heard the infamous "tick". I checked over the bow, and couldn't see any cracks in the wood or splinters. There were none.What I didn't notice was that the handle backing strip was likely split across in between two of the bands.
I put the bow on the tree again and drew it (it's a rope and pulley rig), and I could see one limb pulling well out of balance with the other one. I could tell the bow was a gonner, then, so I pulled it to full draw to see whether the crack would show or the bow break. After two pulls It let go hard at the handle.
Looking at the damage, I'm thinking that the backing at the handle's sharpest bend let go first -- the tick I heard. In hindsight, the flax was much too thin (really paper thin) and not wide enough, either. I should have put it down in two or three layers, but being new to flax (and backing, in general) I'd only put down a thin narrow strip.
Then when flexing the wood, with no reinforcing, the bow broke between the two bands at the steepest part of the grain, and the crack instantly propagated back through the bands. They snapped, one after the other, and the limb separated off.
While the reinforcing experiment was a failure, I think it probably would have worked if I had used a thicker backing. Or if instead of individual bands, the wrapping around had been continuous over the sharpest bend of the handle. Though that wouldn't have looked as much like the original bow with it's band and diagonal reinforcement on the limbs.
I don't think I'll try another Meare Heath soon -- I the weight and feel of the bow wasn't great. Though it wasn't finished yet, It weighed nearly two pounds, and was pretty unwieldy to maneuver in the house. It's was more of a novelty to try. I did really want to see what kind of arrow speed it might have had, just to compare it with other reproductions, but didn't get a chance with a finished bow. If I ever do one again, I think I'll try an even lighter wood than red maple, and better backing of the handle.
Anyway, that's the post mortem. I think it came close. And I know more about flax reinforcing and some of what a real Meare Heath must have felt like like to heft and shoot.