Well I shot it a bit today.
Brace height of 3". Drawing 20". It was pulling 28# at that length. Bracing the bow requires a stringer because of the force needed.
It's VERY fast, and surprisingly smooth. I was expecting a lot of handshock, but I'm pleasantly surprised.
You're going to be amazed at what I did to fix it... I simply glued another lam onto the belly. Just like that. Tillered to be stiffer in the handle, cut from the same piece of bamboo.
It's taking a pretty unique set. It's straight before stringing (with the siyahs about 3" in front of the straight line). Then it takes about 2" of set immediately after being unstrung. That set returns to zero after about 5 minutes. I put about 50 arrows through it today, and it is currently straight, like I've never strung it before.
The side twist is also quite strange. It pulls a tad sideways on the tillering stick, but when drawn and fired it tracks pretty true. The lower side occasionally ends up a tiny bit to one side, but nowhere near enough to miss the string bridge. Which I'm very happy with, considering they're just 3/16" wide.
I also haven't heat tempered the belly at all. I'm kind of saving that for my trump card as a tiller. I was considering heating the handle section to make it stiffer.
It's such a disaster to look at though. The belly lam that I glued on was a bit too narrow - so it was entirely unbalanced when dry. To remedy it, I simply carved a couple of pieces of thin bamboo and glued them awkwardly onto the edges. They got a small sanding (which is the extent of my artistic skill), and somehow fixed the balance.