I don’t mind breaking the odd bow but four failures in a week is a bit tough to take!
One Perry reflex experiment with Indian Laurel on the belly. Shop got colder over night than I thought and I unwrapped the bow and the glue just popped open. I was pretty annoyed as I’ve made similar mistakes before but I thought I could just peel off the bamboo. Got to about a foot from the end and the glue had set and I split the belly wood.
A big (aiming for 100lbs) elm flat bow that popped at 70lbs as I’ve over heat treated it.
A flipped Hazel Molly that I did exactly the same to.
And most recently a little hazel primitive thing. I narrowed the tips up and they were too small for the loops on the string I was using. One shot and the string came off and it broke on the belly. Done that before too!
On the plus side I now know that a heat gun and insulation siding will DEFINITELY heat treat a bow all the way through. Like actually all the way through, not just the air getting round the back. Which is great as heat treating can now take a fraction of the time.
Also, Hazel is just incredible. It seems to be out performing wych elm which I’m pretty surprised at. I tried to break the other limb of the primitive and couldn’t with basically all the weight I could put on it. It 61” and 42lbs at 26” when I broke it.
Here’s a video of me trying and some stills. The unflexed photo is after not before. The cracking sound is dirt on the floor
https://youtube.com/shorts/ZRhcKA_GHUw?si=YB1N-WBaE0FlxZ6x