Tiller critique please

Started by ffdiggs, December 26, 2017, 11:39:00 PM

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ffdiggs

68" ttt, pulling 60# at 28". I would like to get to 30" draw if possible
 https://imgur.com/QpZrIuW
https://imgur.com/tVxwT4m
"The Man, The Myth, The Moustache"

Pat B

You should be able to get another 2" if you get the outer limbs bending a little. Other than that it looks pretty good to me.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

mikkekeswick

The upper limb is almost hinging out of the fades.
The lower is also bending far too much about 1/3rd out from the handle fade.
Unbrace it and look where the set is. Remove wood from the end of the set to the tips.
Unfortunately you have pulled it too far with those problem areas to get the best performance out of it now but you should still be able to get a good bow. Golden rule - never pull a wooden bow past a problem! Chances are those areas would be visible when drawing around 10 inches, even brace height. Try to develop your eye to spot errors early on.

Bowjunkie

We shouldn't judge the bend until we see it unbraced so we can compare where it is to where it was.

George Tsoukalas

The first picture looked like the top limb needed to be scraped mid limb on. The bottom picture looked pretty good. Jawge

ffdiggs

I take pictures with one limb up then I flip it to see how it looks, the upper limb that looks as though it is hinged is the lower limb in the second pic, and it does not look hinged. I think it may be a slight optical illusion because the back of the bow has a lot of contour to it, it is not flat from side to side or from the handle to the tip, it is very contoured. With that limb on the bottom I have a 1/8" positive tiller.
I will put it back on the tiller tree and take another look, and will try and get the tips bending a little more. This bow is for a tree size guy with long arms.
"The Man, The Myth, The Moustache"

Wolftrail

QuoteOriginally posted by mikkekeswick:
The upper limb is almost hinging out of the fades.
The lower is also bending far too much about 1/3rd out from the handle fade.
Unbrace it and look where the set is. Remove wood from the end of the set to the tips.
Unfortunately you have pulled it too far with those problem areas to get the best performance out of it now but you should still be able to get a good bow. Golden rule - never pull a wooden bow past a problem! Chances are those areas would be visible when drawing around 10 inches, even brace height. Try to develop your eye to spot errors early on.
+2

ffdiggs

How about now,
 https://imgur.com/Z4d8Bur  
 https://imgur.com/Pk7oHSE
It has some string follow, and lost some poundage, but I think I can pike the ends and put it on my R/D form and maybe the string follow won't be as bad or noticeable.
"The Man, The Myth, The Moustache"

Wolftrail

looks like its bending to much in the lower limb fade area

Pat B

I still think the outer limbs could bend more.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

ffdiggs

Im not gonna touch the first third of the limbs anymore, I will probably give the outer third a few more scrapes
"The Man, The Myth, The Moustache"

Pat B

By softening the outer limbs you will relieve the stress on the inner limb.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

Bowjunkie

Flipping a wooden bow and drawing it each way isn't a good thing, imo. Doing so can cause unnecessary set. The fact that it looks hinged one way and not the other should hint toward some of the reasons this isn't a good practice.

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