I have just "finished" a maple mollegabet bow that came about more or less by accident.
I first intended the piece to become an ordinary flat bow and then, in the spur of the moment, I thought
"and let's also make it a holmgaard! yeah!" and this happened:
The tips were naturally reflexed. This, some might say, would be a good reason not to try to squeeze out a lever bow out of this poor piece of maple, or at least make the handle very short. They would be right, but I only thought of this after I had already cut the levers out.
I know the purpose of the levers is to be light and stiff to make the bow faster and give it better string angle, but when I realised my tips looks like this:
(left and right side, respectively)
Knotty knots, leave my tips be!
I thought
"these look bad" because they don't look particularly light (though they are stiff, and string angle is good) so I want to make them lighter. Problem is, I have no idea how much I will be able to do to them without being forced to take the whole bow down several pounds due to making them too weak. I want to avoid that, it is already just 38# at 28''.
Do you guys think it will be possible to cut out sharper shoulders to reduce weight, or is the wood too thin already? Will the knot stop further advancements on its tip? It would be unpleasant to loose all the benefits of those light mollegabet tips and only strain the the mid limb a whole lot.
Opinions and critique appreciated.