Since I'm new here (I read the forums a lot though), a quick introduction is in order.
I was always interested in archery as a little bow, but back then my bows were bend sticks (usually from our apple tree) and my arrows were unfletched twigs. By high school, I was rediscovering the joys of shooting arrows and started to do a little research. I quickly stumbled upon the TBBs and got ahold of them though an inter-library loan. Wow, was I blown away with all the information and the gorgeous bows and arrows in those books. My parents ended up buying the set (I-III) for me and I made several bows.
After high school, archery pretty much took a back seat while I was in college. Only recently have I started getting back into it.
So my wife and I have been cleaning out the closets and I came across a spiral notebook that had bow designs in it. After flipping through a couple of pages I saw where I kept a journal of every bow I made! Each page was laid out as such:
Bow Name:
Wood:
Design:
Length:
Draw Length:
Draw Weight:
Tiler:
and then I had additional categories for some of the bows, like arrow speed, comfort, etc...
Here's a summary of the bows:
#1 - "Beginne's Luck" from a small diameter, unidentified tree. Drew about 30# @ 26" but had a bad hinge in one of the limbs. I tried backing it with a bright red yarn, but I think the bow eventually failed. Probably made in 1999-2000.
#2 - "Silverback" - Douglas Fir backed with duct tape
. This was the breakthrough bow for me, the first tillered bow that handily outperformed my stick bows. Unfortunately it developed a crack in the handle and eventually broke.
#3 - Red Oak 1x2 - was tillering to 42#@28" but broke at 44#@25". Guess I over strained it
I even drew a picture of where it broke on the back, the grain was severally violated, so no wonder it broke!
#4 - Another Douglas Fir board bow. Was either never finished or broke during construction.
#5 - My first real success! Red Oak 1x2x6. 'D' bow, 68" long. Backed with some blue cotton material. I still have this bow but I try not to shoot it anymore.
#6 - Douglas Fir flatbow. Was tillered too strong for my cotton string, so retillered. Shot well for many years, but recently I broke it when I made a new linen string for it. It had been in storage for years, so not sure if the extra stress from the non-stretching string did it in, or if the canvas backing had become loose.
*** This was the last bow I made while in high school***
#7 - A quick Mahogany bow made while at my brother's house in Indianapolis. it worked for a while, but the wood just kept taking larger and larger set before it eventually broke.
#8 - Silver maple bow from a tree at from my brother's house. I didn't actually get a chance to work on it until the summer I was working in the Rockies. It never made it past early tillering
*** Then, after another 6 years of no bow or arrow making, I have finally gotten back into it***
#9 - Red Oak 1x2x6. First bow with a deep handle. I actually started this one while in college but never tillered it. I finished this last spring. It's severally over built at 72" long and pulling 45#@29". My first successful unbacked bow!
#10 - Wife's bow - red oak 1x2x6. 70" long, 39"@28". This is a smooooth bow. Arrow rests on both sides so my wife and I can both use it.
#11 - Wife's friend's bow - red oak 1x2x6. 66" long, 35"@28. first bow I actually spent time on finishing (sanding, staining, handle details etc). Really nice.
#12 - Red oak 1x2x6. 50#@28", unbacked. First 50# bow! This one is in my first thread on these boards, "Bends too much near handle, worth retillering". Still a nice bow and made in only one day!
Sorry for the long post, but it was almost surreal going back 10 years to when I just got started making bows.
Does anyone else keep a journal?