the other day I took several of my recent bows out and shot the heck out of them, just some field flight shootingm easuring distances, checking "feel", etc. All 3 bows 63", including the yew trilam I just posted (52# at 27", 2" reflex), BL selfbow (58#, basically no reflex, flipped out tips) and boo backed massaranduba (bulletwood (also 58#, 1.5" reflex)
The BL bow was outstandingly the best of the three. Shoots a 540 grain cedar arrow 230 yards, and just has that feeling of "oh, yeah" when you release. The massandba was close behind, a little less cast and a lilttle less sweet in the hand. The yew tri lam felt a littlle floppy by comparison - was using lighter arrows for it. It may be the weight made the dieffence. 58# is just a nice weight for me. I had planned on get the yew to that weight, but just went a little thin on the wood.
Here is the link to the BL from earlier this summer for those who didn't see it.
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,3179.0.htmlIt is my best bow so far I think. I wonder what makes it perform so well - the wood? Design?> A little better execution of general project?
Thought you might be interested.
Dave