Greetings again,
I'm well into my second bow, which is a red oak short bow, linen backed, about 5 lbs at 18 inches. The linen came from one of my wife's old shirts that she put aside. (Please don't tell her, I want to live to see 40.
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) It's going well, shoots very nicely, but I discovered a tillering issue that I can't seem to correct. I wanted to check with the forum before I end up sanding the thing into oblivion.
The bow has more bend on one side than the other, but I can't seem to even it out. The side that bends more is actually about 0.5 mm thicker along most of the length. I know the wood could very easily be stronger or weaker regardless of thickness, but no matter what I do, it just doesn't seem to want to bend to match the other side.
This is the bow after what I thought would be the final sanding:
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Because of the poor lighting and contrast, I made a version with the background saturation lowered and added an example curve:
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Here I have the bow at full brace, and you can see the issue. At full draw (a whopping 19 inches
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) it's terrifying. It looks very unbalanced and I worry that it would break eventually due to the uneven stresses.
Can someone diagnose this guy? I'd love to finish it so my son can start. After this, I'm making a bow for my wife and another for my daughter. My wife's will be white maple, my daughters will be another red oak bow.
I've already made some arrows. I used dowels (since a 5 lb bow isn't going to break a dowel) and did my own fletching using colored goose feathers. The arrows are great! I'll need to take a picture later. I used a technique where you build a little box with two holes in it, and then cut slits for the feathers, which hold them down while you wrap them. I didn't even need glue. I'll post a different writeup about that.
Thanks!