Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: DC on September 27, 2019, 04:08:22 pm
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I just noticed that the bow I'm working on has a little more recurve on one end than the other. Before I spend a bunch of time and risk the string alignment what difference does it make? Would the tiller be out even though I tillered it as is? ie good tiller with uneven recurves?
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Thanks dc, I've wondered the same. Before I was comfortable bending recurves, I left a few natural recurves and incorporated them in on my top limb on an asymmetrical design. These shot really well and I've thought about even doing this intentionally. I know I'll probably get blasted for this but it's just my two pennies.
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I am guessing you can get it to shoot well,,, with the difference in recurves
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I am guessing you can get it to shoot well,,, with the difference in recurves
True enough I have a takedown having 2 different limbs, because the matching ones broke. The upper limb is also 1 1/2" longer, the bow shoots fine. Having said that having 2 perfectly built limbs does not always mean it will be a better shooting bow. Experimenting proves what works and what does not.
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You should be able to tell if it balanced when you draw the bow and shoot.
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It makes no difference how much each limb has or if its even. I have a buckthorn bow that has one RD limb and one straight limb, just shot it last night. Tiller each limb to math its unbraced profile and make it balance in your bow hand. You will never feel the difference, only your eyes will.
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Ok question. Do these bows have more shock when shot ? If not if we where to cut the limbs off would they weigh the same? Or would a great tiller even the weight distribution between the two limbs? Arvin
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I have no experience with this but I'd venture a guess that if a bow was tillered for one recurve and you cut that off and shortend the other limb equally that you would be almost starting from scratch.
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If the bow is tillered properly if shouldn't matter.
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I would never know the buckthorn bow I was shooting wasn't symmetrical, it feels like any bow does. No two bow limbs ever weight the same if the bow is tillered correctly. In the end all your trying to achieve is balance and nothing more regardless of which limb is bending with more or less force.