From the late great Dean Torges.....
http://www.bowyersedge.com/organic.html
If you have the time and patience to read Dean Torges whole article there is a lot of good info and is mostly centered around “Organic” bows….but a lot of this won’t mean much unless you build bows yourself.
As a glass bowyer of 15 years I can tell you that the same principles apply to modern laminated limbs too, to a certain extent.
Dean does a great job of explaining how the tillering process works and that it’s more about limb balance, and where the limbs are balanced and where they are bending that matters and changes the WAY a bow is tillered. But How the tiller design and and balance is achieved is quite different on laminated glass bows.
The limb design shape, taper rates, and width profile all dictate where the limbs bend for the most part on laminated glass and carbon backed bows.
I’m not going to write a long explanation of the procedure…, but…A custom bowyer can alter the overall tiller and the balance just like a self bow or wood bow. It can be manipulated during the lamination process by shifting wedges and changing taper rates to the same limb shape, or design. Contrary to Deans philosophy , It can also be fine tuned by sanding the glass to a certain extent…. But knowing WHERE to sand the glass is critical.
With big companies that mass produce limbs, and even a lot of smaller bow shops, they rely completely on the symmetrical lay up and are rarely balanced.
This is important…..
You can sand the glass on limbs to change the tiller measurements…. But unless those limbs are bending exactly the same top and bottom as you draw the bow, it will make very little difference. Mapping the limbs on butcher paper is the only way to check your limb balance.
Bottom line is tillering for 3 under or split finger is not even worth talking about . Very few archers could tell the difference in a plus or minus 3/16” tiller measurement. Adjusting your grip and nock height on the shelf is all you need to adjust.
As a bowyer….. unless you start talking about balancing a bows limbs to the pressure point on the grip, the tiller measurements are just reference points to be used when fine tuning.
.02 cents…. Kirk