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Looks like a great start! I'll be following along.
At 70 grams or around 1100 grains on the length of limbs and handle it should be a strong 1/8" thick or maybe 5/32".You've got plenty of width there I'd say.At least 5 months.Better 6 months.It's a waiting game for sure.In the past I would just make other bows while it's curing.I do have some roughed out ready to tiller.You can bend it some after 3 months to adjust questionable tiller or alignment if you want without hurting anything and let it cure more.I've never needed to do that though.Measuring it thickness wise after a couple of months should reveal things to you.It'll continue to cure a good 10 months or more all together.There's more that goes on curing than just physical weight moisture loss.A bonding process so to say.All those little molecules bonding and aligning finding their place....ha ha.I've got one sinewed here on a 3' stretch of handle and limbs with the first layer put on in the middle of august.3rd layer on in the middle of september.2 weeks apart for each layer.Just before hunting season here.About the same amount of sinew.It's coming to 6 months of waiting now on that one.Tiller it soon within a month here.As soon as it warms up in the shop....ha ha.No horn on this one.62" TTT.Reflexed a bit.Going for a happy medium length bow.Levers are around 13 inches long 3/4" wide at base/9/16" thick and a scooch under 1/2" wide/1/2" thick at tips.Working portion of limbs are around the same length wise.A scooch under 1 and 3/4" at fades and a scooch over 1 and 1/4" at fade base of lever.Overall a little more aggressive width taper on the working limb.It's winged elm.Not quite as dense as my hickory.Don't want to hi jack your thread here as your project deserves all the exposure it deserves.Good project showing attention to detail etc.
Looking good Dave. I’m watching Bjrogg
Nice clean neat work. That one should make quiet the shooter.