The first try was documented in this thread:
https://www.tradgang.com/tgsmf/index.php?topic=174761.msg2948328#msg2948328After much time spent with building a house, moving and other upheaval I have finally finished the second bow. This time I glued up the lams into essentially a fancy board and added handle pieces to the outside of that instead of trying to run the lams up the riser ramps. The bow was glued up in 2 steps. The first glue up was the core and belly lams glued together with ~6" of deflex:
The second glue up was the above assembly glued to the back lam while pulled into ~2.5" of reflex. This pic shows the first assembly sitting on the second glue up form, showing how far it has to be pulled into the form for the second glue up:
Now the finished trilam assembly (with a 0.100" thick power lam added in the riser area). You can see the final ~1/2" of reflex after coming off the form. The weird bump in the middle is the power lam:
The riser pieces before glue up:
The bow was designed using software and I did no tillering on this, just cut and sanded the back profile to shape and then worked it out to 28" on the tree. Here it is just short of full draw:
The initial 1/2" of reflex pulled out on the tree and it has taken another ~1/2" of set after several hundred arrows, which is pretty good for a 50# bow using a fairly mediocre bow wood. This was the point of the experiment and it has worked out pretty well, IMO. I know for sure I never could have made the same bow tillering from a board and not had 2+" of set in the end.
While it was pretty well balanced on the tree, the bottom limb has come up a bit weak and final tiller is a bit under -1/8", so I should have done a bit of adjustment on the top limb to really nail it. I wasn't too worried about that on this one as the experiment was the point, not absolute tillering perfection. As I learn and fine tune this method I will care more about the fine tweaks at the end.
The final product. It draws 50# @ 28" (maybe a touch less after final sanding, I never checked again), is 67" NTN and 2" wide. Tips are 5/16" for the last several inches. The tip overlays are walnut and maple. Finish is tung oil.
Mark