Last night I was tillering a birch board bow and it was looking great. I had used the long and short tillering strings and it had great shape and I was getting really good limb movement. I went to brace the bow and without warning it came apart on me.
I'm guessing I was just going a bit too fast and my string may have been too short for that initial brace, but I know I had more limb movement on the tillering tree than what that string was asking of it. :confused:
What most likely went wrong? Is white birch (paper birch) a decent wood for a bow? It looked promising while I was working on it. The wood was native Alaskan birch and was kiln dried. I'm thinking about starting another, but if it is a problem with the wood, I won't waste my time.