Progress report:
Well I finally got some more time to work on my bow. It was too big and awkward at 74" so I shortened it down to 68" ttt. It is 2 1/2" at the fades straight for two thirds the length of the limb then it starts to narrow down for the last third for the tips which are 3/4" at the moment but I'm planning on takin them right down to 3/8 or less with a tip over lay of ether raw hide or hard wood. The picture of it being tillered is with a long tillering string and it is only being pulled 4" and it is #120. A little on the heavy side, and a lot heaver then I thought it was goin to be. I had read somewhere that for the Holmegaard you only want a working limb from fades to mid limb, to minimize stacking. That was a mistake with this one. I had been removing wood (at times I thought it was a lot of wood but the poundage of the bow wasn't dropping that much) and drawing it repeatedly to 4" then 4" and a bit and so on. Well I had it down to #100 at 6" and it fretted. Not really bad but enough for me to go crazy with a rasp and take off lots of wood on the upper limb portions above the frets to thin it down more then where it was at the fret sight. I thought the bow was goin to be only #30 by the time I was down with it. But when everything was said and done it is #79.5 at 28", it still needs to be sanded smooth so will be around #65 when I'm done.
I did some reading and found out that one of the causes of fretting is having the would too thick on the knock side of the fret, which was exactly what I had. Also frets is caused by over straining the fibers, which also happened I belief since it was pulling so many pounds. I read that to try and fix frettes is to sand it smooth and then with a strong needle push a series of wholes along the length of the fret and if the fibers don't raise any more when the bow is drawn then the problem is solved. Well I did that then drew it to 28" a few times, seemed to be ok, no more fibers raised up. Since then I have shot it about 80 times and have drawin it back to 28" 500 times in a row and it seems to be ok. The pictures of the frets is from right after I draw it back those 500 times. The last two pictures are of the same section of frets on the lower limb. The frets occurred at about 4" from fades on upper limb and 5" from the fades on the lower limb.
It has a 1 7/8" set on the lower limb and 2" of set on the upper limb. I had heat treated the belly of it and had induced an inch of reflex. The heat treating was to stop the birch from fretting which it is prone to do, but from the weight of the bow at initially tillering I think that the limbs were too thick and the heat treating never penetrated the limbs. Any ideas on that one? I will measure the thickness of the limbs sometime when I get a chance but they aren't much more the a 1/4" in the thinnest place. I don't have any pictures of it at full draw yet. But there is no hinges in it that I could tell anyways. Do you guys think it was survive?
Bushman