First and foremost, thank you to KennyM and Roy from PA for their guidance. And to Tradgang for inspiring me to complete a project originally started many years ago.
After successfully building 2 36" R/D longbows with my own design and Kenny's lams, glass and guidance, I felt confident enough to attempt a full size recurve.
I also sketched out my own form for the recurve. It is 1.5"wide, 54" long, and I was shooting for 50@28. I had actually purchased the lams, glass, and a strip of carbon from Bingham's probably 7 years ago, long before I ever found this site, and they had been sitting in my closet ever since.
With the extra last minute knowledge gained here, and not wanting to eliminate the carbon for fear of not making weight, and a little bit just because I bought it, I chose to stack with the .002" taper at the back, carbon in the middle and parallel on the belly. My thought process was "it may have no effect being pretty much in the middle through most of the working limb, but getting progressively closer to the back may make for responsive tips".
Long story short, and to my amazement, the recurve came out of the oven looking like a winner. Following rough out, and learning that my weight was really close to $$$, it was time to figure out how the heck to tiller it. That is where Roy from PA came in. Thank you again for your guidance.
I have been shooting it for a couple of weeks now. She has a little twang, but no hand shock that I can tell. She is apparently tillered perfectly for 3 under, and shooting .400 spine carbons, 100gr inserts and a 200gr point with authority.
I did learn a couple of lessons here. Mostly take your time, don't get in a hurry, and be patient. But overall, I am thrilled and intend to shoot my first trad deer with it this season.
These are the only pics I took of the youth R/D before giving it to my 5yo nephew. I was shooting for 100% locally native woods, so it is ERC over Mesquite that I harvested and milled.
I wish that I would have thought about using native wood before purchasing my lamination so many years ago. I ended up using Mesquite for this riser too, and the limbs are Red Elm as you can tell. My next one will be Texas Juniper on Mesquite, with an Acacia (Texas Ebony) accent. I intend to harvest and mill it all myself just to say I did