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Bending green wood
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Topic: Bending green wood (Read 3176 times)
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Don Case
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Bending green wood
«
on:
December 18, 2013, 03:00:35 pm »
If I clamp a shape into a green stave and let it season like that, is that shape more permanent than if I steamed or heat bent it after seasoning?
Don
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PEARL DRUMS
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Posts: 14,079
}}}--CK-->
Re: Bending green wood
«
Reply #1 on:
December 18, 2013, 03:19:33 pm »
Ive never tried Don. But it seems naturally reflexed wood holds more than heated reflex. So why wouldn't a dried in reflex hold better than heat?
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Only when the last tree has died and the last river has been poisoned and the last fish has been caught will we realize we cannot eat money.
Oglala Bowyer
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Posts: 175
Re: Bending green wood
«
Reply #2 on:
December 18, 2013, 04:06:24 pm »
Don it'll hold just fine. I've done that to a number of plains shorties.
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Don Case
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Re: Bending green wood
«
Reply #3 on:
December 20, 2013, 08:31:28 pm »
I don't think I recommend this for Ocean Spray. I collected a really nice 72"x 2"dia piece day before yesterday. Yesterday I debarked and roughed the belly. It had about an inch of sideways bend so I clamped it to a 2x4. It took quite a bit of force to take the sideways bend out. I sealed the ends but not the belly or back. I looked today and I have never seen so much checking. I stopped counting at 25 checks, mostly on the back. I guess I got overconfident, I usually shellac the back and so far have not had any, I mean none, checks. Mostly I'm writing this off to not shellacking the back but I wonder if the strain of bending contributed to it? Anyway this nice stave is useless now. Too bad, six foot pieces of OS are rare.
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Forest_Farmer
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Posts: 208
The best things in life are not things,,,,,,!
Re: Bending green wood
«
Reply #4 on:
December 22, 2013, 01:18:33 am »
I was wondering the same thing about working with green wood. I just worked down a Osage limb removing all the sap wood and then sealed the whole stave with Elmers glue. It has a bad bend and twist on one end and wondered if I should try working it without heat by clamping to a board. I will wait to see more replies to your post before I try anything.
I know I should wait for the wood to cure but I'm néw to this and just ichin to make another bow.
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When I stop learning please put me in a box!
George Tsoukalas
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Posts: 9,425
Re: Bending green wood
«
Reply #5 on:
December 22, 2013, 10:14:56 am »
Remove the bark, rough it out, shellac or poly the back and steam it. I don't remember doing this but it should work. I think Torges uses it and it is mentioned in his book "Hunting the JOsage Bow". He uses shellac. Jawge
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Set Happens!
If you ain't breakin' you ain't makin!
NeolithicMan
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Posts: 562
No beliefs, just ideas
Re: Bending green wood
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Reply #6 on:
December 22, 2013, 10:32:17 am »
I split a 2" diameter hickory sapling and clamped in a lot of reflex and slightly curved tips. the bow died due to later mistreatment on my part but the green wood held a good amount of the shape I left it in. thats the only one I have done but I heard of elm being a good candidate for this method
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John, 40-65# @ 28" Central New York state. Never enough bows, never enough arrows!
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Bending green wood