Well I got this hackberry stave. Actually, due to very nice splitting and a good sized stave, I have two staves. The one I will be using is:
78" long
1 1/2 inch thick at the least thick point
3" wide at the least widest point
pics:
Got the string out, decided a center line and marked the three compass points.
Got froggy with the hacket, now it looks like either a 10" typical pyramid bow handle, or a smaller, like 7" or 8" handle on a pyramid/paddle bow. Will probably go for the pyramid tapered paddle bow. All i'm talkin about is this:
or this:
Mabie it's better to call it a propeller bow. The one I roughed out the sides on is the 78" er. The one to the right is the 73". Could easily get 3" wide at the fades with this guy.
Another way I keep centerline is use a very straight board, works nice if you got a wavy stave that lifts the string and causes it to not be straight.
Got finished doing everything I need the hacket for. Hacked out the side profiles just a wee bit some and reduced the belly, trying to strike a balance between getting enough wood off so that further reduction with finer tools is not so hard on me, but more importantly not taking too much wood off. For me and my dangerously clumsy accident prone hands, it is better (for me) to leave more wood than I need when using my hacket.
Now I use a 8 dollar meat cleaver I got at walmart to clean up my decimated mess of a stave.
I love that thing. Works awesomely.
Ya, I HAVE run into a problem already, but I don't know if there is anyway I can explain it clearly without drawing fifthy thousand horrible ms paint pictures I don't feel like drawing and no one feels like looking at. It is an alignment problem, I mean it is more of a complication to roughing out the profile than a problem. Probably went too fast when centerlining it. The way to remedy it involves turning the bow just slightly, turning like you were spinning a top, to get an idea of what I mean, to gain a good centerline with the handle. I still got alot of wood to work with. It was very stupied and hasty of me to hack out the handle partially, but I felt like I needed something to go on while profiling it. Don't ask me why. I just got excited,
This kind of makes the back incline to one side, and to get an even bow form I will have to SLIGHTY violate some rings on one side of the bow. I have did this on ash a bunch of times and once on a hackberry, so I know I will be alright, I just wanted to state it early so yall know whats comin.
Roughing out the profile has been a little slow. Due to alignment issues verses the natural curve of the crown of the wood, which anyone with any kinda sence would follow the crown when roughing out a bow from a stave like this one, anyone except me. This ones gonna have some character. Had to violate some rings like I said earlier, but it's a comin along. Ring violations are ONLY on the sides, and not too bad. If hackberry is so much like elm with the interconecting grains, then it should be ok, right? Nothing near the middle where all the stress is. Now, this hackberry stuff DOES have a heartwood, contrary to what one might think after messing with small staves of it. (one like me) It's a dark brown stuff, real real hard, but has to be a real big tree to actually develop that much. Anyway, this is what I theorize, lol. If you can see in my sideways pic, theres just a trace of it left on the belly. It collects it's self around knots and the like too. And then sometimes seems to disappear completely. Is elm the same way? Never worked elm before. Sneaky heartwood, right there.
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