Author Topic: Advantages of setback in bow?Starting new bow. I have shag bark and winged elm.  (Read 1439 times)

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birdpointlightstring32

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I am planning a set back in handle bow and love the look of them. What are some of the advantages of set back in handle bow? Ancient plain indians bows and european cave drawings show wide spread use of this design. Curious why they used it so much. Could anyone chime in with any thoughts? Thank You.

Offline RobWiden

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    It gives your bow better early draw tension, since you have to move the tips of your limbs further to brace it. That gives you a better force draw curve, which means you are storing more energy. Storing more energy, in theory, means you get better cast for the same draw weight.
    In theory, and there are a lot of variables, a set back accomplishes the same thing as reflexed limbs or recurves. It might be easier to just bend the bow once at the handle than twice at the tips or over the whole length of the limbs, and you wouldn't have to worry about making the bend match on both limbs.
    I've made a few, and they turned out fine, but remember, any of the above options stress the limbs more than a straight stave design. If your design is pushing the edge of what the wood can do, the bow is more likely to fail.
If I knew what I was doing, I'd probably be bored with it, and I wouldn't be here.

birdpointlightstring32

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Thank you Rob.