Poor belly grain can make an otherwise straight bow twist at brace and it can compress and fracture on angular grain lines. I've seen both firsthand. Is it a sure thing? No, but the longer I do this stuff the less I like to play games with the materials I use.
Del, Id like to see that done and the tiller it offers. Not sure your going to get a sooth inside bend on a square butt joint. Something has to separate for a butt joint to bend.
yeah, I'm with you on the twisty grain. I think I've seen youtube vids of balista type machines with blocks on the belly or some such.
I had a Yew bow that I was reviving, pulling out the set and heat treating. I overdid it and it cracked right across the belly to about half the thickness of the bow
. I was about to give up on it but thought I'd give it a chance. So I strung it, put it on the tiller and took it right back to full draw
... no problem! So having survived that I thought I'd patch the belly. The bow is still going strong.
I was really just trying to say that not all "problems" are actually problems. I s'pose it's down to the individual bit of wood, faluts that run across or along the bow prob aren't so bad, it's the diagonal stuff that get you
Del