For my first attempt at this I am using red oak boards for the wood. I like red oak for it's beautiful appearance, it is an OK bow wood and it is cheap enough that I can scrap a few without crying over the cost.
EDIT - The first bow design I am trying is a pyramid back profile, 67" NTN, target weight of 40-42# @ 28".
This is a dry fit practice run for the first glue up. The core lam, risers and belly lams are clamped in place. The deflex and reflex shapes are in circular arcs. This is because the bow design has a pyramid back profile that will bend in an arc of circle tiller. For a back profile that gives an elliptical tiller you would want to do the deflex and reflex using elliptical arcs.
The actual glue up:
The bow off the form:
This attempt was a failure due to gluing problems. I used Titebond III because it is more than strong enough, is much cheaper than epoxy and has no toxic fumes. Being water based, it caused the lams to cup heavily, resulting in large gaps on the edges of the lams.
It wasn't all a lost cause, though. I learned that the bow kept a bit over 5" of the 6" of reflex that the form has. That is better than I expected. I also got to experiment with bending the bow limbs forward into the 3.75" of reflex I planned for gluing the back lam on. They will easily bend that far with minimal effort, so I know that the second glue up will not cause problems in that way.
I also had problems with getting the belly lams to form to the ramps on the risers due to their thickness. I boiled them and clamped them onto the riser to pre-bend them to the ramp radius, but there was lots of spring back and they still needed a lot of clamping force to get them tight to the ramps and the fades off the riser. I also had issues with feathering the fades out to zero thickness, but that was due to my inexperience with making a riser block and nothing to do with the Perry reflex part of the experiment.
The lam thickness I tried is one of those places where a lack of experience with this design is hurting me. For a same wood bow (with all lams from the same wood), Dan Perry recommended having the belly lam be 2/3 of the thickness and the back lam 1/3. So that is the ratio I was using on the first attempt. That is what resulted in the 0.150" belly lam that didn't want to bend up the riser ramps easily.
Since I started, I have done more analysis on the effects of Perry reflex and it turns out that the effect is increased with thinner belly and back lams. This means Dan's recommended 2/3 belly - 1/3 back ratio isn't that important and I can go thinner to make it easier to bend them onto the form. The downside that I can see (so far) is that the thinner lams won't hold the deflex and reflex shapes off the form as well. This can be compensated for by increasing the amounts on the form, but it is not something that is easy to calculate and I am going to have to make a few bows to see how much extra is needed.
Mark