Author Topic: Argg, I am an idiot... I got this bamboo backed warbow with a couple cracks....  (Read 3496 times)

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Offline Badger

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  I feel the way you do about bamboo, I tend to get a tad more speed out of them but doesn't seem worth the failure rate. I know a few guys who sell bows, the boo backed are the most popular but a lot of them are letting go somewhere between 1st shot and 500th shot.

Offline toomanyknots

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  I feel the way you do about bamboo, I tend to get a tad more speed out of them but doesn't seem worth the failure rate. I know a few guys who sell bows, the boo backed are the most popular but a lot of them are letting go somewhere between 1st shot and 500th shot.

It's just a lot of work to put into something to have random failures for seemingly no reason I can see.  :'( I mean with this bow I might of been asking for it, but with good hickory I would figure it would of lived. The bow finally failed by the way. I had it out to 102# @ 29". Pulled it to 30" (on my pulley assisted tiller tree) and I heard a crack, got scared and let go of the whole thing, haha. The patch at least held the bow together. If cracked lengthwise from the patch leading down the limb. When I took the patch off, I could see it was cracked pretty bad. With the shorter length I think I could of called it done at 28", and should of, but than it probably would of went latter on anyway. And it seems dumb to make that heavy a draw weight bow with a normal 28" draw length. This is the second warbow I have killed in a row. The first was basically the same trilam woods as this one, but with a jatoba belly. Which, as ADB kindly let me know before hand that it was going to do, :), it chrysaled really badly.

EDIT: And I broke my darned scale too when I let the pulley go, now I gotta buy a new one of those...   ;D
"The way of heaven is like the bending of a bow-
 the upper part is pressed down,
 the lower part is raised up,
 the part that has too much is reduced,
 the part that has too little is increased."

- Tao Te Ching, 77, A new translation by Victor H. Mair

Offline adb

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  I feel the way you do about bamboo, I tend to get a tad more speed out of them but doesn't seem worth the failure rate. I know a few guys who sell bows, the boo backed are the most popular but a lot of them are letting go somewhere between 1st shot and 500th shot.

I've completely stopped using bamboo, and haven't for a few years. Too unpredictable.

Offline toomanyknots

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back it and shoot it!

I was thinking I could of sanded the boo off and re-backed with maple or something, but then I would have to re-nock, maybe re-tiller... alas, I am lazy.  :)
"The way of heaven is like the bending of a bow-
 the upper part is pressed down,
 the lower part is raised up,
 the part that has too much is reduced,
 the part that has too little is increased."

- Tao Te Ching, 77, A new translation by Victor H. Mair

mikekeswick

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Very interesting to hear about the failures.
I've never had a problem with bamboo apart from it checking sometimes when put in a heat box to cure glues. Although that was my fault for using it when it had too high a moisture content.