Hi folks!
It's been a while since I've been on to post, though I have been watching and voting on BOMs.
I ran through a spell where everything I touched turned to kindling, sometimes dramatically, which tends to blunt the confidence level, but, as they used to say here, "if you ain’t breakin', you ain’t makin' ". So, I'm still building, and keeping more in one piece than not, but they tend to be light, around 30#@28", plus or minus. That's fine for indoor target practice, for me and my wife, and the occasional newcomer to our little group who's never shot before and needs something light for starters. Along the way, I'm starting to get the hang of making fast light bows, but eventually, you do have to go heavier. I was asked to make a "long bow", along the lines of 45#@28". I have a nice piece of quarter sawn red oak that I've used, gluing some scrap from the same board on to thicken up the handle. Dimensions are 69 1/2" ntn, 1 3/4" wide at the fades running down to about 5/16" at the tips. I'm still working it down, so far I've had it to 44#@22", easing it toward the final 45#@28". Also, linen backed, and don't mind the rough around the edges handle area, I always save that for last.
Call me gun shy, but the runout along the sides of the limb just jumps out at me. I've done one before (white oak) and it worked (it eventually failed, but at the edge of a ghost of a knot, not the edge), but it's still a worrisome thing to me.
I thought it might be best to get it in front of some folks who know what they're doing, at least for a gut check.
Am I worried for nothing?
Thanks,
Frode