Just joined with a question. I picked up a maple board the other day that I thought was perfect for a bow, but it's a bit narrow for a flatbow. Then it occurred to me that I hadn't done an ELB and I dedicated this board to such a project.
It is 3/4 inch by 1+1/2 inches by six feet, heavy for a maple board, with beautifully thick latewood. However, every board bow I've made so far has died violently unless it was longer or backed. There lies the question: what should a poor high school student use to back the bow? I don't have regular access to sinew, and every attempt to find rawhide has failed.
Or should I even bother? I'm planning on leaving the bow the full length of the board, and it will be moderately flat bellied, but I'm still nervous about the prospects here. I want it to come out about 50-55 lb at 28", but I would settle for a good 45 lb bow as well. I'm also a bit hazy on the design as far as layout. I figured I would pattern the bow after the design laid out by John Strunk in the "Yew Longbow" chapter of TBB Volume I, except maybe symmetrical rather than the slightly asymmetric design he specifies.
Any help is greatly appreciated.