I am sorry if I am bringing up a subject that has been beat to death already. I have read much, but I want to make sure I understand, because it seems that people are saying different things.
Here is the text right from the Bingham instructions I am using:
"Place the bow on the work bench and sight down from tip towards the riser. If the limb tip points toward the right, for example, mark that side...On the marked side, file the string groove about 1/8th of an inch deeper. This can only be done once! Then remove about a 1/16th of an inch of matierial from the edge of the limb, maintaining the shape of the limb...If additional tillering is necessary, remove more material from the same edge of the limb, but don't further deepen the string groove."
However, other sources seem to agree with this method (includes diagram):
Remember this mantra..."if a limb pulls to one side, mark that side" (of the tip). Then unstring the bow and deepen the nock on that side. This serves to move the center line of the string relative to the mass of the limb. Only sand the side at mid-limb if correcting the nock grooves or centering the nocks won't fix the problem or if you run out of room to move the nocks. Work on one limb at a time.
Both instructions agree that the weak side groove needs to be deepened. No problem there. However, they seem to disagree on which side should be edge-sanded. The Bingham doc says to sand the same side on which the groove is being deepened, while the other says to sand the opposite side (in the working area of the limb). One explanation I read suggested that the Bingham instructions refer only to the tip area, thus keeping the tip more symetical. It doesn't read that way to me, but if it is referring to only the tip area, that explains the contradiction.
I need to confirm that I know and understand the correct method before I start removing edge material from the wrong side!
Thanks for your input.