David, you are right that Valentine's day thing is way too complicated!
Actually, I hit a home run. I booked a little ocean fishing trip, and she loved it. The trip isn't for another couple weeks...hopefully we bring back plenty of fillets, bow-backing skins, and fish glue!
David, What about doing that with osage staves that have lots of early wood. When I think of super prime osage, I think of next to no early wood.
Slackbunny, you make it sound so easy. I doubt I will be setting it up anytime soon though. I was thinking of a pressurized canister for impregnating arrow shafts with different drying liquids. Kind of like Bob Lee's DuraWood risers. That would not have to have near as much pressure, or maybe that should use negative pressure? Anyway, that might be a good build to get me thinking what a stave compressor build would go.
Berny, I had never seen that bit about the compressed bow wood lams by Bill. Makes sense that he would have applied his technique to bow woods. Also, makes sense that it was applied to laminations rather than staves. I wonder what Chet thought of the compressed bow lams. Would be cool to see one of those bows.
Dauntless, that lignostone sounds interesting. But I see now with some more recent replies here that it has been tried and the results not that exciting.
PatM, Mike, I am thinking more along the lines of taking a softwood and making it dense, rather than taking a dense wood and making it extremely dense. I would like to find a way to make use of locally abundant woods in making production bows. Like ash-backed compressed cedar or fir. Just a thought.