I have a nice hickory stave from Mike Yancy 66" long, taken down to 1 7/8" wide, 33 1/2 upper limb - 32 1/2" lower limb. The handle section is drawn on at 4", with 1 1/2" fade outs. The limbs are sawn down to 5/8 thickness at this time with the handle section at 1 5/8 thick. The handle section is still full width, not narrowed. The upper limb has 2 1/8" recurve gently along the full length while the upper limb is perfectly straight. Twist is virtually nonexistant.
The goal is a 27" draw @ 60# suitable for hunting antelope on the open plains, deer in the woods, and even elk in close dense woods here in the hills. Also, I intend to shoot arrows of about 660 grains or 11 grains per lb of draw weight. Not a target bow, English war bow throwing phone poles, or a twitchy wild hare flight bow ready to blow at a change in the breeze, but a bombproof big game slayer.
Options on the table include sinew, rawhide, snake skins and options strictly off the table for now include bamboo backing or veneer backings.
I have an idea how I want to build the bow so that I get enough limb to push heavy arrows as fast as possible, but I am not really sure if I am really on the best track. I have a healthy respect for many of you bowyers here on the site, some of you really understand the physics and have the experience to make the best of it. So, I am asking for your input on the limb design to acheive the parameters I have set out. What design would you choose and WHY?
This is open to all, young and old, new to the sport, or the guy that built bows with Maurice Thompson. Pitch in one and all, this is gonna be interesting reading, I bet.