I've had a comment about it being a "fine tiller" job.
I've had a comment saying the bottom limb is bending too much.
The bow is canted toward the camera as best I can to have the pic perpendicular and square to the camera.
I personally always looked at the bottom limb and thought that it was bending too much also, but the tips were even on the tillering rack against the grid board behind it, and it always strings up to brace height of 6.5-7" with about 1/4 or slightly less Postive Tiller. So I called it good and finished the bow.
Well....now, it strings up to 1/4" positive tiller after sitting overnight, and it strings up to 1/8" to 1/4" positive tiller after sitting for just an hour or so after shooting....BUT
after shooting it in a bit, the tiller will flip to slightly negative tiller.
This is making me think that Simson is correct and the bottom limb is bending too much and I'm overstressing it.
The bow is shooting great and spitting out an 8.83 gpp arrow at 174-177 fps...and a 10gpp arrow at 164-167 fps with a 6.75" brace height (last measurements today)...I just have not found high enough spine arrows for the heavy tips I want to hunt with (I have test packs of doug fir up to 100# on the way).
Should I leave it as is, or should I take some scrapes from the top limb?
Without any help from y'all, I'm thinking maybe take a few scrapes off the outter 1/3 to 1/2 of the top limb to get it bending a bit more. I'm thinking that would stress the bottom limb a little less and get the two limbs bending more equally in relation to each other...which would allow the bow to maintain a slightly positive tiller throughout a shooting session or a long hunt where it stays strung for hours.
But I don't want to rely on just my thinking on this...I really would appreciate your eye and advice based on what you see and your experience with such issues. Maybe this is no big deal and I should call it good and hunt with it, but if there is an obvious problem with a fairly simple solution, I want to try to deal with it now. Thanks.