Hi
(Sorry for typos and wierd phrases,- I'm Danish)
I've had three bows break on me in a row. After the one last night snapped, I was sure I'd never want to make another bow again. I bet you've all tried standing there stomped, with two pieces of useless stick, but I do hope your failure ratio is better than mine..
Ive worked on some 10 self-bows, but Ive only got 4 left and they're pretty weak. The rest broke on me with a big bang.. So with that ratio, I must be doing something wrong..
This is how I go about making bows:
I collect wood in a forrest near by. I dont cut down fresh trees, but take home some of the large sablings that the forresters already have taken down. I visit the forrest quite often, so they dont get to lie in the forrest floor for too long. I pick the straightest I can find about 3-4 inches i diameter, and its mostly ash, maple and birch. Then I cut them in half and let them sit in the garage for about half a year. I know longer is recommended, but Im impatient, and I dont mind that they set a little. The staves are about 60-70 inches long
I work on the stave with an axe and a drawknife, that I also use for scraping.I tiller slowly, and I do excersise the bows. When they tiller ok, I take the bow in for some extra drying, -and this is usually where the fun stops. I dont let them dry for more than a few days, and when they're back on the tiller I work slowly again, but suddenly they've become very brittle and the last two bows broke with very little stress (compared to what they could handle in the garage). I dont consider my house to be overly warm. -about 20 degree Celsius.
I'm not going for the extremes with the bows. Id be very happy if I could make a 20-30 pound bow.
I have dog bone rawhide ready for backing, but I've never reached the stage for applying on my latest 3 bows.
The pictures below are of my latest two bows. The top one is ash, I had great expectations for this one. It was almost done, though I hadn't drawn it to full lenght. Maybe only halfway. I could draw it quite far even after having it inside for 3 days. But last night when I thought I'd just excercise the bow a little i broke.
The bottom one, where the limb is missing is an hazel stave. Worked fine, almost had it to 80% of its draw lenght, but it then broke sitting still in the tiller.
I cant tell if the break started on the back or belly?
Did I violate the grain?
Is my design bad? (flat belly and sharp edges)
Should i apply rawhide as soon as the back is ready (before tillering)?
Any tricks to make a break-safe bow?
Please give your 5 cents on the pictures.. I need to know why my bows are breaking, before I'll get started on the next one.
Kind regards,
Søren from Denmark