I saw build-along in which arrow shafts were used to check for limb twist. Thought I'd try it here on my second recurve project, so I clamped four arrows on perpendicular to the bow: one on each notch line, and one at each fadeout tip.
While I was busy cogitatin' on what fixin's I might have laying around to make a pair of tiller blocks (another trick I saw in the build-along), I noticed that I've got some twist in this new bow even before I've had a chance to brace it up. Both limbs twist the same amount in the same direction--or another way of putting it is, my riser is listing to port about 2 or 3 degrees.
You can see in the photo that the top two arrows, which are clamped at the riser fadeouts, are parallel. So are the two limb tip arrows (photo makes it look like there is a slight twist between the two ends, but I think it's a camera illusion). Now if only all four were parallel! (Must investigate the laminating form to figure out why this happened.)
My question is, if the two limb tips track perfectly parellel when I get a pair of tillering blocks on them, should I try to correct the built-in twist, or just accept it and finish out my riser?