Author Topic: hickory board silk tie backed  (Read 1737 times)

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Offline flungonin

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hickory board silk tie backed
« on: January 20, 2010, 03:23:56 pm »
I have a question on a project I am going to pursue. I originally built a hickory board bow with a silk tie as backing. I got to shoot the bow for a day and got a 27" draw from it. I think the poundage was around #35-38. I was hesitant on the last 2" for draw. Well to make a long story short I put the bow away and 3 years later to the month picked it back up and was flinging arrows with it along with some other bows (solid fiberglass bows). I wasn't using the proper stringing technique with the other bows and when I did the same thing to the board bow it broke about 8" from the end. I am now having to deal with a bow from the new length. My question is I have Gemsbok horns. If I get the horns down to 1/8 inch thickness and use it on the belly of the bow along with the silk backing, how much wood should I remove from the board bow before I put the horn on. The bow is 44'' end-to-end, 1" wide, red oak, with the handle laminations removed the thickness at the handle is 7/8 tapering to 1/4 square at the very end. The reason the handle is so narrow, I cut the handle and had laminations on it and cut into the riser. So what do think. I have tried to take up the silk tie but it isn't budging.  This project will take a little while as I still have to file the ridges off the horns and clamp, steam and straighten them.

Offline zenmonkeyman

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Re: hickory board silk tie backed
« Reply #1 on: January 20, 2010, 03:26:19 pm »
I haven't got any answers for you, but I'd love to see this project as a buildalong!
If the ppl ever allow private banks to control their currency, 1st by inflation, then by deflation, the banks & corporations that will grow up around (these banks) will deprive the ppl of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. Thomas Jefferson