Hey man, I understand this whole thing looks like a ten car pile up. The idea is to try and use otherwise scrap pieces to make a bow. Except the backing. I think I was just worried the bow would be too light and/or the bamboo too strong, but I really don't know till I try. I'm not going to use the locust pieces, like Springbuck said. I will just have to tiller it accordingly. It doesn't take too terribly long to make the laminates. Prepping the split and reducing them with the hatchet really makes them go pretty quick, unless I screw up and have to start over, which may happen
I guess I had things backward in my mind when I was thinking of a two piece belly with a thin stiffer portion above the Juniper, but you guys have the experience, which means you have the knowledge, I don't.
So where I'm at now is this. I got the core all done and set aside. I asked about the grain orientation on the belly, because I felt like I made a big mistake by not paying attention to that. So I made new Juniper belly pieces from my last Juniper scrap and I like them much better. They are only a tad thicker in the mid limb and thinner toward the tips. No more Juniper scraps so they are it. I just need to double check the glue lines and consistency to finalise them. Probability tomorrow.
After that there is the back to finish. Only if I get the BL near perfect, I will use it. Any second guesses I will go with very thin bamboo back. I have a lot off bamboo and kind want to do something different, that's really why and to satisfy me curiosity.
After I have the back done, I'll do several more dry runs and finalise the profile, glue, add riser and that's it.
Nothing too different tonight. Springbuck tomorrow I will post how the Juniper and the core go together. If you see something you can tell me, if you want. Asharrow I think the Juniper will hold up as long as I get things distributed right. We will find out how I do on all that soon enough. I'm not in a rush to glue it up and I am taking time with glue lines and back. Good to know about the pyramid design, makes sense. I guess it's an efficient design. I don't dislike the look of them, but I kinda dislike the way they look. I know, not a good reason probably. I'm going to try for maximum efficiency on however this design ends when all is said and done. I surely do not want to overbuild. I worry about that a lot and really don't like over building, I have a hunch, that is why all my bows have come back too light so far. It's only my preference, I'm not being critical at all.
My goal is to understand the bow and all of its energy, might take the rest of my life? I want my bows to work, every part to be there for a purpose and not have extra wood hanging on gumming up the works. Reading here has answered many questions I have had and I'm grateful for that, I feel though that doing is the only way I will truly learn anything. People operate differently and I like that. There is so much to learn about bows I just have to make my mistakes and keep trying. I posted this project hoping to learn more than if I just did it, and I have. Thanks for that.
One of these days I might get it right. I will try not to ramble, I will wrap this project up soon. In real life I don't talk, introverted and I think, I can see a lot of what I write is taken the wrong way, I will work on that, it's hard to gauge a voice through writing alone, I also write fast simply because I have limited time. I try to come back and edit spelling sometimes, no time to proof read unfortunately. Thanks for the comments, Until next time,