Great suggestions guys! I was thinking that on a final bow, an ipe spacer would be alot better than letting the hickory smoosh against itself (no horn). Likewise, Ken that's a great idea! As I'll get into later, I was also thinking about adding some sinew to the inner limbs, so that and a little filing/fitting might recess the hinge comfortably- I like it
!
Last night I went and piked it down from 68" ntn to 64", getting the weight back up to 70#. The hinge stretched some more, but suprisingly the bow held up (actually, it's now a straight-shooting rocket launcher
). This stretched the hinge a little more, which began wobbling side to side when I drew the bow, so I stuck in a little piece of oak, slanted so the one side it tended towards wouldn't begin to "kink" all the time. As you can see from it folded (which I forgot in the other ones- this is before the piking), it doesn't sit together pefectly.
Right now I seems that the hinge is stretching out almost as much as it can (it's two folded pieces, they can only go so far unless they want to just give up and break), so when I transfer this hinge to the next bow I'll simply put the hinge on tight, tow (toe?) the screws, and then adjust a spacer if there's any more stretching.
From the full draw pictures you can see that most of the bend is in the inner limbs, which got me thinking about sinew. I'd prefer to do the limbs as a normal flatbow with long, sweeping reflex, and then use the hinge to make a deflexed riser to create a R/D bow without the tillering/bending head aches. Given that this bow is a bit shorter than normal and yet still accurate (and quick), I'm seriously consiering perhaps a second bow at this slightly shorter length with sinew (to reduce set and add mas near the grip). I built a second hinge yesterday and may well try both of these options. I'll be using this current bow to stretch the second hinge also, rather than having to adjust on the new bow. On a side note, this little experiment bow is helping me see what attriubtes make for a more stable bow. Even with all the flaws, this bow shoots the pants off of "Sweet Imperfections" at 20 yards. More notes for the notebook then!
[attachment deleted by admin]