After the other thread I was surprised to hear so many people built their bows for hunting!
Some of you might remember the ambush bow challenge a while back and I think we should start it again. Here's the list of requirements written by Dean Torges from his website.
1. It must be capable of staying braced for hours on end, day after hard hunting day, and not lose perceptible cast. The arrow you shoot in the early morning should strike the same mark in the late afternoon at a hunting distance.
2. It must be quiet without the use of string silencers. Since most opportunities are close quarter at animals capable of eye-blink maneuvers, it shouldn't make more noise than a walnut hitting soft ground.
3. It must be easily braced. Even if you're sitting or lying on the ground, you should be able to brace it effortlessly and positively with one throw, without the string slipping from the nock or the bow jumping from your hand.
4. It must balance in the hand so it is quick to point of aim. Also, it must be short and maneuverable so you can bend into an awkward position and shoot from brushed-in tree stands or restrictive ground blinds without bouncing the bottom limb off platform cables, branches or the ground, or waving the top limb about like a semaphore flag.
5. It must be forgiving. If you need to turn to one side on a tree stand platform and tuck the lower limb between your legs for clearance, for example, or cant the bow in some unusual position, the bow must not want to torque or twitch from such an awkward posture or the likelihood of a tortured release. In other words, the handle must provide for a repeatable grip and the limbs must be of a stable design.
6. Even though it is short, no more than 58" nock to nock, it must be smooth to a 28" draw, so that no stacking hinders reaching full draw from any kind of awkward situation—cold, stiffness, or an unbalanced posture.
7. It must pull at least 60 lbs at 28".
8. It must shoot a heavy arrow, in excess of ten grains per pound of draw weight, and at 15 yards strike pretty much where a considerably lighter arrow does.
9. It must be of dependable materials and of a reliable construction, as simple as its pursuit allows.
10. It must be pleasurable to shoot. No kick, no shock to the nervous system, nothing unorthodox to the shooting style.
I think this is a great way to show the versatility of woods if designed properly. I'll point out that simson's bow is a great example of an ambush bow. So if you guys are interested I think we could make this contest format or just for show and tell. What do you think? My bow will of course be made of poplar.