At the risk of opening a can of worms on even vs positive vs negative tiller, shortened limbs, etc., I'm looking for some input on how this bow tillers to me. I managed to get my son to take a picture of me with a simple board bow I recently finished. I've never been able to see how a bow bends with me vs on a tillering tree. I'm curious what some of you more experienced folks out there can see that would help me improve my tillering.
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The specs on the bow are:
65" NTN Paper-backed maple board.
It's just under 1 3/8" wide at the fades, parallel for 16", then tapering. Last 6" are stiff, parallel tips running about 3/8" wide.
I made a weak attempt to flip the tips a little but it didn't do much.
Gave it an even tiller with equal limb lengths. Arrow pass is at about 1 1/4" up from center.
It came to tiller at about 50# but settled in at around 40-45# with a couple inches of set.
This was a mistake that I figured would be another kids bow. The board was warped so I cut it down more narrow than I'd like. It sat roughed out in the closet for most of the year until I thought I'd finish it up. It ended up being a decent shooter by my meager standards but who knows how long it will last. A 28" arrow just under 600 grains has a point-on range of about 22 yards, which is fun. I shoot 3-under.
The first thing I noticed was my high elbow. But the second thing was that the bottom limb seems to be bending more. My bottom limbs seem to take a bit more set than my top limbs on just about all my homemade bows. I know that my tillering gizmo read perfectly even before I finished it and that was after about 50-100 arrows ran through it. But how I bend it looks a little different.
All thoughts are welcome.