Author Topic: White Oak board bow, Rawhide backed. 50# @28" 69.5" ntn. (update) cracked fade  (Read 7763 times)

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Offline kbuggie

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I kept working on everyone's suggestions.  I feathered the fades more, rounded all corners, glued bison horn tip overlays on, and tried to curve the string grooves more to ease the string angle.  What I thought would be the upper/lower limbs was wrong as the bow shot Rose city 11/32 40-45# arrows much better "upside down."  So I ended up putting bison arrow passes on both sides so the bow could be shot with either limb up or down.  Thx for all the help on this one!

Offline kbuggie

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Prior post is past tense because the bow cracked in the 'lower' fade during the final shooting session before adding tru oil.  Cracked along an early growth grain line where I had perhaps rounded the edge too much and the rawhide backing sanded back too much.  Also maybe didn't exercise it enough after sanding.  Anyway, it shot 400-500 arrows before breaking and was fun to shoot.  There must be an old bowyers saying about not polishing your bison horn tips before ensuring the wood doesn't break.
« Last Edit: May 19, 2019, 09:10:14 am by kbuggie »

Offline Pat B

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That crack follows a grain line. Maybe a smoother transition all around the fades would help. It also looked like the bow was bending a bit too much right out of the fades. Other than that I think it looked good.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!    Pat Brennan  Brevard, NC

Offline SLIMBOB

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Pat's right, and I would add that your thickness taper in the fade looks to be the culprit to me.  Smoother transition for sure but, you have to make the thickness adequate in the fade, especially if the handle is so narrow.  It was bending there or at least it was trying to.  It found a good place to focus all that stress right on that grain where it broke.  Thicker fades.
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Offline George Tsoukalas

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Oh no! It did crack along a grain line. On a board you need to have straight grained  lines tip to tip or nearly so.You  cannot have grain lines that go back to belly.

You  did not  to do anything wrong except for selecting the wrong board.

See my site for more.

http://traditionalarchery101.com

Jawge

Set Happens!
If you ain't breakin' you ain't makin!

Offline Bryce

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A few things, I’m too lazy atm to read the replies but here’s my quick take.
•remember there is a difference between grain and the growth rings
•upside down rawhide isn’t recommended but either way it’s glued down it’ll hold all the same.
•your string grooves are just a tad steep is all. To start with just grab a framing square and 45 will get yah in the ballpark. That, or just eyeball it.
•every bow has grain runoff in the fades, just can’t let it work more than necessary in that short section.
•for white oak, or at least the Oregon white oak that I LOVE to work I leave 2 1/4”fades for a bow around 60”ntn and 1 3/4 wide and 4” for fades for a full length ELB or ALB.
•all species of white will make a serviceable bow and in my area (PNW) they where used as war bows.
The downside is it’s fairley compression...... not weak but smooshy. So 2” of set is normal. If you can heat in 5” of reflex it’ll sit flat for years with the proper tiller shape/profile. That being said it’ll make tillering a b*%#€
•with any bow start with a good floor tiller and from there, skip the long string and brace it around 4” ALL flaws will be apparent and just leave it braces and remove slight amounts of wood and excessively short draw/exercise the bow.
Once it looks good. Full brace and continue. Aim for about 5lbs above desired weight so you have some wiggle room. And don’t pull past that weight and it’s as simple as that.

Keep it up man,

Bryce
Clatskanie, Oregon

Offline ohma2

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Thats a shame,you did a fine job on the tip overlays.your finish work is nice ,with good wood you are going to build some good bows.dont let it get to you and keep at it.

Offline Sidmand

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Are you 100% sure that was white oak and not red oak?  I ask because on white oaks, the pores are usually clogged up except in the sapwood (there probably isn't a good way to tell if that is heartwood or sapwood if it was from a board).  Your closeup pics seem to indicate that the pores are pretty big and quite open.  I had some 'oak' that I thought for sure was white oak, but I discovered it was not after doing some research on it.  Unfortunately that research came after I had cut said oak into backing strips for use on some Ipe and said Ipe ripped the stuff apart, explosively, during tillering.  Luckily I had fixed my tillering setup to work with a pully so I could stand back and watch the bend.   :o 

"Criticism is something we can avoid easily by saying nothing, doing nothing, and being nothing." --> Aristotle

Offline kbuggie

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Thanks for the suggestions and encouragement, guys.  I've traced this bow's outline onto a purchased hickory stave (visible under the oak bow in a pic above) and will give it another go, hopefully no backing on the hickory stave and slightly narrower at fades.

To @Sidmand's question, I'm not 100% sure its white oak because I'm relying on what the local non-chain lumberyard told my friend who bought 6, 12 foot 2x10's from them (not for bowyering).  He's had a commercial relationship with them for 30 years.  To my eye, it does look more pale in color than the red oak at home depot.
« Last Edit: May 20, 2019, 04:16:54 pm by kbuggie »

Offline George Tsoukalas

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Look at this board. Just about ideal. Your board may have survived a 20# pull. With a board bow the no. 1 consideration is the grain.
Jawge
http://traditionalarchery101.com/boards.html
« Last Edit: May 23, 2019, 06:09:39 am by George Tsoukalas »
Set Happens!
If you ain't breakin' you ain't makin!

Offline Mountain Man1

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Not a whole lot to add as I'm quite new to bow making, but here's a thought for the future... Who says rawhide needs to be smooth? I think the fuzzy side out adds an interesting texture and adds to the "primitive" look. Given the clean lines and smooth finish of the bow perhaps it would be better suited to an "uglier" bow, but worth some thought. Either way I think it was the wood that failed you and not the reverse, you clearly have some talent going for ya.

Offline doggonemess

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Sorry about your bow! It takes a certain kind of mad persistence to keep making bows after one fails on you, and you've got the right attitude. :)

I'm kind of late offering advice, but I'd like to share one thing that I do that has helped greatly in the past. You take the picture of the bow on the tree and open your favorite photo editor. Then overlay an ellipse onto the bow. You should make sure that the ellipse touches four points - the two spots where the arc of the bow starts, and the string nock points. Now, this is for a non-recurve bow, so you'd need two more smaller ellipses for a recurve, and the outer "touch points" will be different.

I find it works best for me when I line up the outside edge of the ellipse with the back of the bow. By lining it up just right, the spots where it isn't bending properly will jump out at you. It's hard to judge by eye sometimes (I didn't see the hinge at first), but this has never failed me.

For example:



EDIT: I was just looking at your image of the break, is that close to where the hinge was in the image I uploaded?
"We've all heard that a million monkeys banging on a million typewriters will eventually reproduce the entire works of Shakespeare. Now, thanks to the Internet, we know this is not true." - Robert Wilensky

Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people.

Offline Bryce

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Should also be noted that each bow design has a designated tiller shape and a single circle or even a couple of them are only useful with absolutely straight staves and boards.
Useful trick when done properly with the right concepts of tiller.
Clatskanie, Oregon

Offline Knoll

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Keep in mind how much you've learned from this bow. Congrats! On to the next!!
... alone in distant woods or fields, in unpretending sproutlands or pastures tracked by rabbits, even in a bleak and, to most, cheerless day .... .  I suppose that this value, in my case, is equivalent to what others get by churchgoing & prayer.  Hank Thoreau, 1857

Offline Woodely

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Are you 100% sure that was white oak and not red oak?  I ask because on white oaks, the pores are usually clogged up except in the sapwood (there probably isn't a good way to tell if that is heartwood or sapwood if it was from a board).  Your closeup pics seem to indicate that the pores are pretty big and quite open.  I had some 'oak' that I thought for sure was white oak, but I discovered it was not after doing some research on it.  Unfortunately that research came after I had cut said oak into backing strips for use on some Ipe and said Ipe ripped the stuff apart, explosively, during tillering.  Luckily I had fixed my tillering setup to work with a pully so I could stand back and watch the bend.   :o
I have worked WO quite a bit and his photos are clear enough that show the wood is whitish, there is definitely not a tinge of red in thar.
"Doing bad work is an exercise in futility, but honestly making mistakes is trying your best."