Roy, limb timing/balance threads… It’s a love/hate thing… I love the bows that result from it and I’d love to see folks make and shoot bows as well behaved and predictable… without my input :^) That’s the only reason it lures me in. Git er done. Explaining this stuff over and over is like a curse... I hate that sense of it. Feels like Groundhog Day. Lol. I just spent hours talking with a budding bowyer from down yer way. Get ready for a Bownanza up here in the coming weeks.
Ok, maybe I like it a little :^)
Roy has quizzed me for years, then draaaaags me into these discussions and ultimately complains that my posts are too long. A book could be written about this stuff… and he wants it in a paragraph, post, thread, or email… Make up your mind old man… you want me to talk or don’tcha? Crazy ol’ son of a….. xoxo
Like Roy said, it’s kind of hard to envision exactly what you’re talking about. But if I understand your explanation well enough, ‘mostly’ what you are seeing with the initial tension on the string ISN'T that the one limb is necessarily stronger than the other, rather, it’s the teeter/totter effect due to the string hand fulcrum being above the bow hand fulcrum. It’s just geometry. Well ok, and physics too :^) It APPEARS stronger… now... but maybe not for long…. I’ll explain…
(I just went back and watched your video(well done by the way) and yes, the right limb is being pulled down simply because your bow is being supported at its center, while you’re pulling the string away from that center…. as many do… and your tillering tree’s cradle design is allowing it to tip… not that that’s a bad thing.)
As near as I can tell from here, your cradle and lines for three under and split are positioned reasonably well. Your bow is acting accordingly.
A bow acting as yours is at this early point “might/could” still be perfectly, dynamically balanced at full draw… meaning, the limbs may still be perfectly balanced at full draw relative to the archer’s holds on bow and string. But this slight, early misbehaviour reiterates some of the reasons I advocate designing the bow so that its center is at or close to the string fulcrum… and understanding their relationship and practical effects if they’re not. The farther the two are separated by design, the more the bow will try to tip in the tree(assuming we hold it and pull it in the tree how we’ll do it by hand).
In other words, the farther the fulcrums are separated by design, the greater the shift that must be navigated (or its effects WILL be later realized) between static balance and dynamic balance. Static balance being the balance point of the bow with no human contact, and dynamic balance being the balance point under the bow hand with full human effect at full draw.
The greater the shift, the more patient you’ll have to be in your hunt for dynamic balance.(i.e. the more it will fight, the more fickle it is and the later in the draw you’ll find it). So, if that’s the case… don’t try too hard to establish it too soon. If things are as I suspect, for YOU, now is the time to be patient.
Conversely… the CLOSER the fulcrums are oriented to each other, the less shift must be navigated, the less it will fight us, and the less negative effects bestowed upon the arrow and archer. Also, the closer they are, the sooner in the draw you can find dynamic balance and the easier it is to maintain it throughout tillering. Yours isn’t bad, and isn’t far from how one of mine would act if I set it in your tree and tugged lightly on it. I’m ok with a slight shift… and there are reasons why. You’re ok. Don’t despair :^) It’s what you do with it from here on out that matters.
It should also be understood that the shift, when it exists, can be adjusted for/allowed, to ‘some’ degree depending on severity, under the bow hand during the draw. But when it’s so bad that it can’t be, that’s when you see guys’ bows leaning heavily in their full draw pics. It’s all a matter of degree. Personally, I think degrees of unbalance add to less stable bows, handhock, tuning hurdles, shifting tiller, poor arrow flight, and more, so the key, the goal, for me is… to design and tiller/time the bow so that the shifts are minimal enough that any effects NEEDN’T be accounted for or felt by, or dealt with, by me or the arrow. If you have never shot a bow coordinated for you as such before, you’ll really appreciate it, and want to settle for nothing less after you do.
In essence, in your video, you’re witnessing the beginning of a shift. And that degree of shift isn’t bad. I’ve seen folks’ proclaimed “well-tillered bows” flip right out of a 'proper tree' onto the ground. The only way a bow WON’T shift at all, is if the bow hand fulcrum, string hand fulcrum, and bow center are all one and the same. Center/Center/Center…. how MOST folks design, place, tiller, show, and ‘balance’ their bows ‘centered’ on their tillering trees and tillering sticks…. The problem is… when it’s done, most of them hold them and shoot them very differently… and the bows react accordingly… sometimes desperately.
For every action…...