I made a hickory board holmie. The working limb is 2.25" wide for about 2/3 the lenth of the limb and about 1/2" thick, about as uniform thickness as I can muster across the working limb. It draws just a hair under 50# at 26" and is 68" OAL.
It's my 4th successful bow, in that I can shoot it without it breaking. I took it hunting for the first time last weekend and it stayed strung for a good 12 hours. No deer--early October and more hunters than critters on the public land.
Anyway, there was a dramatic--and I mean 2-3 inch increase in set after the hunt. It did return back to its original shape, but still had some increased set. I then put about 3 dozens arrows through it last night and it got more and more sluggish the more I shot. And again, a lot more set after.
What is going on here? All my other bows are pryamid style hickory board bows all of which have some set, but not an increase after strung for 14 hours.
I'm confused. I know hickory absorbs moisture and that would do it, but why isn't that affecting my other bows? Is this a problem with really wide, flat, rectangular limbs? Is this a hickory problem? Or did I just not make it that well? If its the latter, I can take--I'm still new at this...
Thanks for your insights!
-Brian