Going back to
arachnid’s questions on why to make a tri-lam since I have no experience with ELBs
….
> 1) What are the pros and cons of a tri-lam vs. a double lam bow?
Gordon nailed the prime advantage of tri-lams over backed bows- they use much less expensive (or difficult to obtain) belly wood. Some other advantages:
1. The performance advantage is debatable, but I tend to think a tri-lam yields a faster bow than a backed bow. Methinks this is due to a lighter bow when lighter core wood is used and, it’s said…. there’s another glue line for prestressing. Whether a tri-lam is worth the additional effort in construction is even more debatable.
2. One can use the same form for glueing and the same bow profile and length and get wildly different bows by changing the taper and/or thickness of the lams, changing the length of the power lam or tip wedges. One can in theory get a bow that needs no or very little tillering- something I’ve not accomplished
3. A minor point but, compared with plain backed bows, they have less spring-back (or reflex loss) once removed from the form after glueing- especially if the belly of a backed bow isn’t pre-tillered.
4. Some think they look cooler or whatever than a backed bow.
Cons: More labor intensive. A thickness sander is just about a necessity. Less belly wood for tillering, More glue lines to fail if your glueing is sub-par (use Urac or it's replacement).
2) Assuming I do want a tri-lam- are there any major design differences?
The major design difference is the core. Of lessor import- tip wedges and the power lam.
> 3) What are the characteristics of a good core wood?
Lots of folks suggest maple as a core wood. I agree. I’ve not used it but elm is probably good also. Elm and maple are what are used for inner lams in lots of bows surfaced with that unprimitive stuff we aren't supposed to mention herein. Heck, foam is even being used (albeit expensive hi-tech foam). Which brings up a SWAG: Methinks the core should be light and shear strong. I tend to view a bow limb as a beam wherein most of the stresses are in the extreme fibers- i.e. the surfaces of the back and belly. The catches are that a tri-lam’s limb is a composite beam and is prestressed when there’s reflex glued in or is otherwise “Perryed”.
www.bio.vu.nl/thb/users/kooi/#pijl has some interesting but mind-numbing stuff on bow mechanics and composite bows.
c.d.