Author Topic: Help for my first wood board (Red oak) bow  (Read 3287 times)

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Offline JPF

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Re: Help for my first wood board (Red oak) bow
« Reply #15 on: April 03, 2018, 02:29:15 am »
Thank you for your feedbacks, will keep them in mind, but since I've already started this design might as well continue on it, and see how it goes. So far so good.
Will go step by step.

Offline Springbuck

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Re: Help for my first wood board (Red oak) bow
« Reply #16 on: April 05, 2018, 09:45:01 pm »
1-Can i make the active limbs thinner without risking a permanent bend or breaking?

  First, a lot of new guys get this misconception that a thin bow is going to break, or even that some thickness resists set.  This is backward!  You MUST make limbs thinner to avoid set (permanent bend) and the thinner a limb is,  the less likely it is to break.  BUT!!!!!!!  A very thin limb like this IS at risk.  NOT because it is thin, but because it is UNEVEN in either thickness or strain.

 Right now you are worried that if you pull it more it will break.  It probably would, but not because it is thin.  The real reason is that some places are too thick, and others are thinner.  So, the bend will find the thin places.  They will bend too much, too far and could break there.

The solution is to watch that video about the gizmo.  Do not pull the bow any farther yet, keep using the same 11 lb weight on the string and make the curve better.  More even.   Already we can see some places bending and some places not at all. Slowly scrape away wood where it isn't bending and you want it to bend.

2-Or can i narrow them (but i have rawhide on the side)?

Yes, you can narrow, but you will still need to fix thickness in some places.  You can also taper the active limbs side to side if you want.  There is no rule against it.  The sides don't have to be parallel.  maybe by thhe handle you leave it 2" wide like you have and maybe at the shoulders 1-1/2" wide.  Then work on the bend again.  Slowly.

3-Is the rawhide on the side necessary or can i remove it to show the wood?

  Since the rawhide is on now, leave it on.  Once the bend is better, you should work down the levers, too. They are too thick and heavy, more than you need.

Offline JPF

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Re: Help for my first wood board (Red oak) bow
« Reply #17 on: April 06, 2018, 09:01:15 am »
Thank you for your detailed answer, I've already run through some modifications, I've reduced the thickness of the levers, and started to remove the rawhide on the sides (mostly for look, to show the wood), now i'm going to even the whole limb, to get a better curve overall, I've noticed the parts that needs working on.
I"ll post a picture once i get a better shape.