This is my thrird bow, after making a horrible first bow out of maple, and a pretty sweet kids bow out of elm.
Been fiddlin around with this bow a bit. Last week it had a rough, 2" X 2" handle, and was pulling around 64# at 28".
I decided on an angled grip, with the thought being it would make the string closer to 'center-shot'; the string is maybe 1/2" of where the arrow will rest.
I heat-treated the limbs. Now, I don't have an hour and a half in my life to heat-treat a limb using a heat gun. I seriously don't. So, I stumbled upon a method that worked out good on the kids bow I made last year. I use "Sno-Seal" brand boot treating stuff (I think its beeswax and paraffin) ,coating the belly good, and hit it with a propane torch on low flame. Keep applying Sno-Seal, and the wood seems to drink it in, and the flame won't scorch the wood. Heat really soaks in good. Takes about 10-15 minutes to do, which I can live with.
Problem is, after I heat-treated, it picked up 6-7 pounds of pull........looking at around 73# at 28". I think I'm gonna say to heck with it, and leave it that way.......and make another bow that comes in at 55# or so, because I am a newbie at this and need the practice.
Might make an arrow rest out of rawhide, from a deer I shot and skinned last year.
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CampX, on Flickr
Nocks are from century-old acacia from an old homestead near my place.
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CampX, on Flickr
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CampX, on Flickr
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CampX, on Flickr
And this is what I'm gonna do to check tiller from now on, when I think I am done. I play around with Photoshop, so I used the arrow as the horizontal plane, and flipped the bottom half of the photo onto the top half, superimposing the limbs, with the fades being the "anchor" points.
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CampX, on Flickr