I do not have a proper scale. That is something I know I need. Thanks for the reminder to slow down.
The board is Red oak. It is 70 inches nock to nock. I have a 28 inch draw length. The draw weight really isn't important, I haven't pulled a bow back in a long time, and I'm sure not up to pulling 80, and this isn't a wheelie bow with an 85% reduction. I would be happy with #40. The handle wasn't supposed to be flexy, but it is. The profile is as follows. the handle is just about full thickness of 7/8, the handle is narrowed in width down to about 1.5, and ten inches between the flares (I know, how did I expect a stiff handle with it that thin and long?). It then flares out to full width for 10 inches, followed by a taper of I believe 1/8th per 5 inches, ending in 1/2 inch tips. The thickness is from 5/8ths at the flare to 3/8 at the tips. The sharp edges have been sanded with 80 grit to keep a splinter from lifting. I haven't touched the back wood at all (besides sanding the corners). Thus far the most modern tool I have used is a Razor knife, other than that I have only used 2 different sized planes, a hunting knife, a sureform rasp (total waste of money
) a small hand saw (like a hack saw but with a fine wood blade) a few different sized files, including a rat tail file to cut my string nocks, a pencil, a tape measure a speed square (its fiber glass so I guess its Modern too!)and an 8 inch C clamp. I actually shaped the bow without using a clamp, I would hold one end, and plane with the other (I then realized I could clamp a limb down to the chair and plane it, but that was after it was shaped!).
Shaping the wood was a tough sell with only basic hand tools (I can't call it a bow until it shoots an arrow). But it has been very therapeutic thus far, Time flies when you are deep inside a project, I have really no idea how long I have spent on it, probably close to 30 hours. I have learned a lot about my tools (one hunting knife will only shave wood one direction, whoever put the edge on it didn't do a very good job
), and that my hands aren't as tough as I once thought them to be. I do manual labor for a living, so I thought they were tough from running a shovel, boy was I mistaken!
Where can I find a proper scale? Thanks again to everyone who has planted a seed, and fertilized it with little bits of experience from their own builds.