I obtained a piece of wood from a friend with a sawmill. It was an edge cut destined for the fire pit or the smoker. He had sawn up some white oak for a bowyer who just wanted dimensional lumber for lamination/backings apparently. I believe the ends were sealed as there was no drying cracks on the ends. The piece of wood is around 1.75"-2" thick, edge off a quartersawn slab. and probably around 8 feet long at this point. The whole thing has a nice gentle reflex to it. Since being cut it has been outside but off the ground and out of the rain. Outer bark removed and i'm working on getting it down to hard wood. No bug holes or rot that I can see in it. I got it for free, so if it fails all that will be lost is some of my time.
From what I understand about white oak is that it likes to take set, but responds great to heat treating. I know if I don't get it dry enough and keep it that way it will take set even with a great tiller, but getting it too dry will make it brittle. If it survives tillering to the point of sealing, I don't think it will ever get too dry in our climate stored indoors. My friend with the sawmill down the road told me all the white oak in his house hits equilibrium at 8%, the stuff outside at 14%. Anyone know the ideal moisture content for sealing a white oak bow, I am assuming its probably a bit lower than 8%?
Beyond that, I believe I have enough material to make most types of flatbow from this piece of wood. I am undecided on which design to go with, and very open to suggestions. What type of design has worked the best for those of you that have worked with white oak?
Any other design considerations like trapping the back? Or does it perform better with a rectangular cross section? I would love to hear any other comments or suggestions as to what to do with this piece of wood.