Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: uncleduck on December 16, 2012, 02:32:02 pm
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I recently picked up 2 36" sister osage billets that hopefully will end up as a nice 2 pc takedown...anyway I was able to get a good belly split off of one of the billets, so herein lies the question. I'm feeling a little bit adventurous, but I don't really want to waste the wood on someting thats bound for doom from the start either. Any ideas from the crowd??
A ) 36" plains style bow? I haven't seen anyting this short mentioned in any books Ive read on the subject.
B ) splice some pieces on the ends for a molly-ish bow kind of like the osage/cedar combo that was posted not too long ago
C ) splice on some syiahs
D ) put it in the wood pile until I get another osage billet to splice with it
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If you have 1 1/2"+ or more of usable width for the whole length, and its fairly clean and straight I would splice at least 10" of additional length to each limb using levers/siyahs and make a 56" bend thru the handle bow that has the potential to pull 28" easy unbacked if done right. And narrow the handle section to an 1 1/4". But that's just me and my biased opinion for such bows ;)
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how wide is it? if it is wide enough, i have often thought of glueing shallow angled siyah's like the tips of that bulletwood recurve and have it bend circular through the middle.
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Yup, what blackhawk said :)
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That sound like a good plan. It's 1 3/4" at the narrowest and clean, only 2 tiny pin knots. It has one sideways bend to it but shouldn't be much of a problem to straighten that out with a little heat. Off to the wood pile to find some victims to splice on the ends!