So, I figger I'm gonna build me another long bow. I have some Ipe deck boards, some maple for the core, and hickory for the back. I grind them up, arriving at .255" parallels for the belly, .180" maple with .004"/in. taper for the core, and .130" hickory with .002"/in. for the back. All of the wood seemed good, the ipe was not perfect quartersawn, it was at maybe 60*, and the maple and hickory were both closer to a perfect 90*. I'm using the same form I used last time, a mild D/R. Glued the limbs up with UB 800, cooked it overnight, all good so far. I clean it up, and start on the riser, hard maple. Then, as I'm looking at the pic of the forward handle I've got pasted up on the tillering board, I decide, why not? and try to mimic that. I think this may have been where I went horribly wrong. I put the bulk of the riser on the back, and a backing strip on the belly, and proceeded to try and finish it out. I got the limbs shaped, tips put on, and got to the board, exercised it, pulled eventually just past 7", and it was looking good, so I figured I would go ahead and start the shelf before I finished tillering (another screw up). After I rough cut it in, I put a couple of twists in my tillering string to try and get to a low brace, and used my stringer to put the string back on. SNAP! I can see the glue joints did not fail, the wood did. Any opinions, is it because the back couldn't stretch through the middle of the bow with the riser holding it? Or the belly could not compress enough? When you are making a forward handle, is it vital to put the back and core over the riser back, and run the belly up on the belly side? What don't I know that I don't know? Thanks for any advice, I'd really like to make this style of bow work, I like the lines of them a lot.