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selfbow bowyers, need opinion on this tiller?

Started by Tajue17, March 08, 2007, 01:45:00 PM

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Tajue17

i have this bow here and to me the top limb looks a little stiff at brace.  I cannot shoot this right now cause of the 50 mile an hour winds and below zero temps out side and right now I cannot have someone check it from the side at full draw.  

for now though whats your opinion based on what you see?  top limb is pointed left and brace is about 5 3/4".



"Us vs Them"

Mechslasher

the brace looks fine except for the waves about a third up from the fades.  they can throw off the way a tiller will look.  it will be hard to say for sure until you get a full draw pic.
"There is beauty and magic in a drawn bow."

Cade (SC)

Tajue17

OK I'll get a full draw pic when the wife gets home
"Us vs Them"

NorthShoreLB

Looks nice, If anything seems to have a bit of negetive tiller from here, did you try mesure it ??
"Almost none knows the keen sense of satisfaction which comes from taking game with their own homemade weapons"

-JAY MASSEY-

4runr

To me the outer third of the left limb looks a little stiff.
Kenny

Christ died to save me, this I read
and in my heart I find a need
of Him to be my Savior
         By Aaron Shuste

TGMM Family of the Bow

mmgrode

Looks pretty good so far, but as Cade said it would be good to see a drawn or partially drawn pic on a tiller stick or tree. Matt
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit."  Aristotle

ozarkcherrybow1

looks pretty good to me. You could always try drawing the outline and flipping it around to compare...Terry

Tajue17

okay seems the camera decided to take crappy pics but you can see the bow fairly good..  



"Us vs Them"

PV

Upper limb is a little flat right out of the fade and just above the dip at midlimb.Lower limb looks good but check it after any adjustments on the upper.Has the bow been shot in?
Paul

George Tsoukalas


Walt Francis

I agree with PV, the upper limb looks a little stiff/stronger then the lower one.
The broadhead used, regardless of how sharp, is nowhere as important as being able to place it in the correct spot.

Walt Francis

Regular Member of the Professional Bowhunters Society

BamBooBender

I agree with Jawge and PV. It looks good, but the top limb could bend a little more just out of the fade.
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.

Goodbye Shiner you were always a good dog.

Mechslasher

you're almost there.  the bottom limb looks to have a stiff spot just past midlimb.  the top needs a little more scraping just past the fade and past midlimb.
"There is beauty and magic in a drawn bow."

Cade (SC)

Tajue17

this is making me nervous if from what you see how much more wood you think needs to come off in those areas to get this to start bend,,  (ex;30 passes on the tip of the top limb and 12 passes for the bottom--> as an basic rough example) and do you have a break period with tillering or just keep going non-stop till it bends?

I'm wondering at this point if this will go to one of them back and fourth things and then I've lost 15pounds in draw weight?
"Us vs Them"

Linc

Actually,I agree with 4runr and Mechslasher.The outer 1/3 needs to be worked a little.Maybe 20 scrapes and 10 scrapes near the fades.Exercise the limbs a while and check again.I wouldn't touch the bottom limb.

Depending on the poundage you are going for and where you are at,at the moment.There is also another train of thought: you can shorten the lower limb to stiffen it.Which will also increase your poundage if you are trying to play catch up.

Either way,make sure you continue to exercise.
Lincoln E. Farr

Minuteman

Small adjustments are the name of the game. Like Linc said exercise a bunch after you scrape.
There sure is alot of air around a squirrel...eeyup.

Tajue17

okay gentleman I thank you for the advice,,  I'll post better pics when this is finished.
"Us vs Them"

Jim now in Kentucky

The thing that makes  it  hard  is  that we  don't  know  what  the  stave looked like when  you started.

I  assume those kinks  are just  naturally snakey spots  in the stave.

But was  the stave otherwise uniform,  or  were  there reflexed  or  deflexed sections?

Unless  the stave  was  straight,  while  the tips should  move evenly,  the bow  should not  have a uniform  curve. If  the stave  was snakey  and  has  a uniform curve, some wood  is stressed more  than  other.
"Reparrows save arrows!"

"But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him." Hebrews 11:6

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