I like the bow and your little cart with Ductape, and you guys call us Rednecks . I'd shoot the bow, chrysals and all till it broke. Personnaly I'm not wrapping anything. To me that's hiding a lesson learned and it looks ugly, and the first thing someone that knows bows will ask is, " is it cracked under there"?
Make another one from the other half and see if it does it again. Maybe a little wider on the limb?
1. Ductape! How dare you!
That's finest quality rubber strapping to tie the log on.
It's cut from the finest quality offcuts of EPDM roofing sheet.
2. I fully agree with you and I've alread roughed out the replacement bow from the better half of the log (which will only be giving me 2 bows plus a load of 'useful' off cuts that I'll never get round to using). It will be interesting to compare the tiller and performance of the two bows.
Although, the new one won't have so many swoops dips and tiny knots which may have been contributory to the problem.
E.G If you leave two bunches of knots (or sharp bends) slightly stiff then by deffinition there is a slightly weak point between them.
A wrapping wouldn't be to hide it. It would be to strengthen it, but only if the chrysals were in one small area. Same way as if you break your arm, the Doc puts a cast on, not to stop you seeing it, but to offer support.
I've had a lengthy discussion with someone (hi Mike
) about if an epoxy soaked binding actually does anything and we had to agree to differ (or fight or get drunk whichever was more convenient
)
Del