Here's yet another red oak board bow. This one I decided to make for myself and figured if it broke i'd still have fun making it. Entirely red oak from home depot:
It's Micmac-ish, 71" ntn, about 45# @ 28". The back bow is about 30" long. It's made from 2 1/4"x2" boards glued together with some reflex, and then thinned a bit but it's still fairly stiff. I think it takes about 80lbs of force to bend them back down flat. I figured 30" because that's about where it would have to be for the string to lay down along the main bow when being drawn as per a design I saw in TBBv3. I don't have a f/d curve to support the idea that it increases energy storage, but the bow does pull fairly smoothly with no stack.
I tried to make the tips as light as possible and had some fun trying my hand at carving the complicated string groves:
The last 7" or so don't bend at all and are as light as I dared to make. the limbs on the main bow are actually narrower than the last board bows I made (which were significantly lighter draw) but the board has a much better early/late ratio.
After seeing coaster500's locator grip, I wanted to try one.
I held the unfinished handle where I wanted and used a pencil to mark my finger locations and it feels super comfortable. you can also see how I attached the short strings. I had a different way of doing it that looked much nicer but it didn't prove reliable, so I just drilled into the handle and mounted 2 1/2" oak dowels that I had left over from making some planes. It's not as nice looking, but it holds up. I forgot to get a picture of the other side of the handle, i'll do that later.
Here's the string grove on the back bow:
I can adjust the back strings when braced by pushing this down and moving the string out of the grove. the string is then loose enough to remove from the dowel and retie/twist to adjust.
I was trying to figure out a way to keep them balanced, and here's what I came up with. A string with the same mass, length, and tension will resonate the same frequency. I made both these strings at the same time with the same number of dacron strands, tried waxing them the same amount etc... and the length is the same. This way, the only variable is tension. If I pluck the strings and they have a different pitch, the higher pitched one is tighter. i don't know how good this method is compared to other ones, but it's all I could come up with (thank you physics of music class in college!).
Here's my full draw at 29.5":
The tiller didn't end up perfectly even. The upper limb bends a little more (it measures about 1/8" more bend at brace height) and a slight twist makes the difference appear worse when viewed from the side the photo was taken. That limb took just under 1 1/2" set compared to the lower limb's 1 1/4".
Most of the set seems to be in the mid to outer limbs, and if I were to make another I would make the limbs wider mid limb and outer limb. Next time I guess. It's by far the fastest shooting of the 3 red oak bows, but it also has the lightest tips, least set, and the highest draw weight by a good margin so it's probobly not the 2nd bow design which did it.
I wonder why this bow is thinner and yet took less set, if it has to do with the denser wood or the design. I had a slight theory that the 2nd bow and small strings takes a lot of tension load, making the main bow do more of the compression in comparison to a normal longbow. This might mean the compression load is spread more through the thickness of the limb, making more wood do the work and therefor ease the compression load on the surface of the belly. Just an idea, proboby not accurate because i'm a noob.
I'm finishing it with the same linseed oil as the others, and i'm thinking of doing another wrapped handle like I did on the last bow
It'll probably hide the formed handle, but at least it'll still be comfy.
More target practice soon, i hope and then I can report more on how it shoots. I've only been shooting at my own little target from 5 yards or so, so it's hard to judge if it is truly as inconsistent as a guy at an archery shop around here told me micmac bows are. I am inclined to believe him since it's a bugger keeping these extra strings balanced and at the same tension from one brace to the next. Only time will tell if it ever settles and if the bow even survives.
More pics coming when I get the handle done!