OK, I may as well own up here... *hangs head in shame*
I considered allowing this thread to fade into the distance, but I don't want to create one more thread that dead-ends without some closure. I resolve to write no mystery threads!!!
I wrecked it. That last tug to 50# did indeed fret the limbs in *several* places. Right through the heartwood and into the sapwood. I apologize to the forest for killing a 30+ yr old tree. Thankfully, I learned a great deal in the process. During a full day of moping and crustiness, I managed some brief interludes of rational thought, and here are some of my conclusions. I'm going to start with
What I think I did right:Roughing out the stave almost immediately after harvesting, laying out the limbs, tapering, and floor tillering within a few days. I eliminated excess wood pulling the stave in all directions, making the blank easily clampable and controllable. I shellacked the ends and the back, and had zero problems with checking. I wouldn't hesitate to do it again. Laying out a gradual taper from the fades to the tips. I believe my final width of 1 1/4" at the fades is about right.
What I think I did wrong:Dispensing with patience. Duh. Feel free to chime in with well-deserved I-told-you-so's. I want you all to know that I knew you were speaking wisdom, but chose to risk disaster anyways. But also, I think I cut the stave too short. My bevelled flatbow design was probably not optimal, even if I think it looks cool.
Not heat-treating before bracing. Not cutting more than 1 stave.
What I will do differently for the next one:"Patience, Grasshopper". Design a bend-through handle if a short bow is desired. Make and use a hot-box if patience is unbearable. Heat-treat early. Go with more of an elliptical profile. (I think I will maintain a flat belly, but curve gently into it instead of tillering a sharp bevel, and since this one failed in compression, I will err on the side of too much heartwood rather than too much sapwood.) Finally, I think I will be better prepared for the point at which the tillering changes from weight-coming-off-slowly to weight-coming-off-way-too-fast.
Thanks for the looks and support, and especially the input.
Anybody know of any bow wood in or near Regina?