Actually Art, that was my approach (taper -> tiller). I roughed in the taper with band saw and rasp, then zeroed in on my lines with my fancy scissors scraper. Best one i'd done so far. Problem came when, yes, i did go too long on the long string due to inexperience/misunderstanding it's role(though i've tillered several bows successfully before this one), and in the beginning, one limb was noticeably stronger than the other (see other post "tiller help please"). I suspected from the beginning, removed wood from the strong limb as needed/suggested, but, as i said, got careless on the last 8 inches tryna get it to bend "a little" cause it was stiffer than i wanted. Looking at it again, i noticed that the rings are denser on that end of the board, which explains the strength difference. Anyhow, the rest of what you explained concerning strings/brace height/etc is the BIG lesson i've learned from this, as well as not getting careless with the scraper!
that said, i really do appreciate the input and perspective you guys give. I've only had two bows break on me, and that was because i was experimenting and trying to push the limits
Kirk, i'm with Pearl. This board-bow thing is addictive!!! You better be careful! True enough though, i'm looking forward to my first "real" stave bow in the near future (after i work out this learning curve;)
Question for Art:
"No exercising the bow with the long string past intended short string brace heigth." You measuring from a string travel perspective, or how far the tips move?