Kirk/Roy
I'm not sure you would call it true floor tillering, I did some simple bending of the limbs to get an idea
if they were flexible enough to start using the tiller board. To be honest, I'm not too sure of what the
correct floor tiller process is.
As you have probably surmised by now, I dove into this with little/no experience building a self-bow - a lot of
trial and error. I'm a decent wood worker and pretty good and coming up with my own jigs and methods to do stuff,
but this selfbow thing is more of an art.
I was shooting for a bow in the 45-50 lb range at 28". In the photo where I am pulling it on the tiller board, the scale is reading
52.1 lbs at that amount. It was obviously not close to where full draw would be. In later attempts at exercising the limbs I went 2-3 inches beyond what you see in the pic and is was at 59.5 lbs. I assumed at this point I still had a fair amount of material to take off to get to my target.
The two gizmos on either side of the handle support are some adjustable levelers to keep the bow level while pulling on it. I was having trouble with one side or the other starting out lower or higher than the other making it difficult to determine if the limbs were bending to the same line on the grid. I figured being that tight to the handle there would be little/if any bending going on in that area.
I flipped the tips once I got the bow to the point where I thought I was good to start bending it on the tiller board.
As an FYI - this bow did not follow the typical osage self bow layout formula. It was going to be a narrower, deeper core bow.
Mostly because I was trying to avoid a lot of imperfections along the back of the bow.