Greetings to all..got my daughter a recurve for Christmas and was looking around for one for me cuz I want to play too...being somewhat
cheap I thought about making my own longbow..."after all - how hard could it be" (the most uttered words just before disaster). So I started
a red oak bow effort, following Sams tutorial at Poor Folks Bows, got it tillered earlier today, shot a number of arrows a bit later out the back
and decided to get an idea on what the pull force was as it seemed quite high...much higher than what I would be comfortable with on a
day at the range/course...with help from the son to hold the bow whilst I pull down with him on the scales the force came out to be well
above 70#
So with orbital sander and 60 grit in hand went to work thinning the belly...got it down to 65#, still way too high...I'm looking
for around 40-45. In the later pulling attempts it looks like its just started to splinter towards one end a bit but the fiberglass tape held it
nicely. I have since wrapped/glued more tape around the offending area to ensure I can still use it.
My question, after a long winded intro, in order to get it down to somewhere in the low-mid 40's should I continue to make the limbs thinner
or reduce the widths? I have the widths at 1.5" from the riser out 16" before tapering down to 1/2" at the tip, the total length is 74". I could taper to the 1/2" tip right from the riser and that might work...
Any thoughts?
Thanks'
Tom