Author Topic: Glued on handle pop quiz  (Read 8631 times)

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Offline Pappy

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #15 on: June 24, 2014, 06:15:53 am »
Simply putting it,if it bends in the fads and handle area,the handle will pop no matter what glue you use almost every time. The handle/fad area has to be rigid or what you glue on for the handle/fad build up has to bend with the area bending,or pop :)
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Offline PEARL DRUMS

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #16 on: June 24, 2014, 08:12:15 am »
Glue type is irrelevant. Its all about design. TB3 is fantastic wood glue.
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Offline Badger

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #17 on: June 24, 2014, 08:20:50 am »
    I agree with Pappy and Pearl. I try not to glue a handle on anything over 64" long unless the wood is over 3/4" thick to start with. Short bows like 54" I may go down to 1/2" but prefer not to.

mikekeswick

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #18 on: June 24, 2014, 08:32:50 am »
Exactly right start with a 3/4 inch board for the belly, glue the handle on top of that and you'll have no problems.
Powerlams are also a great way to stiffen up the handle area and add a bit of colour. Just get the edges paper thin for a good glueline.

Offline Hamish

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #19 on: June 24, 2014, 09:11:48 pm »
 Glue type irrelevant? I wish it was, it would make life even easier.
 Titebond 3 is an excellent glue, I never said it wasn't. I said it is rubbery when compared to urea formaldehyde or a proven bowmakers epoxy. The glue line of urac dries  hard like glass and is much more rigid than T3.
T3 is however my go to glue for about 90% of bowmaking. I pretty much always use it for gluing lams for limbs, never had a problem either. So many excellent properties: waterproof; easy to use and clean up; cheap. Definitely the best PVA glue I have come across.
I actually agree with most of what everyone has said about building the handle area up with powerlams, or having a thick belly slat or stave in the first place to insure that the fades aren't bending. T3 or most likely any other glue for that matter will work if the fade/handle area is stiff enough to stop bending. I have and still do rely on T3 if the thickness of the handle area is around 7/8".
Think about it... if the fades are not bending then the glue line will be under less stress and therefore is not going to fail. That is more about the design of the fades and thickness of the belly material rather than glue used.
However many pre f'glass era bows have a thickness at the fades of 1/2"-5/8" with multiple lams feathering through the fades and handle and show no signs of lifts despite being heavily reflexed. They were glued up with urac or resorcinol.
You can make a bow with a glued on handle that will flex through the fades or even through the handle and still stay on if you use urac or another glue that dries glass hard. You can even make patches on the fully working part of the limb glued on with urac stay together(not too many glues will let you get away with that). see Dean Torges website he has an excellent article, I think it was also printed in PA mag many years ago.
If Palioguy used urac etc and did nothing else  different I would be very surprised if his handle lifted. We wouldn't even be having this discussion.
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Don Case

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #20 on: June 24, 2014, 09:41:45 pm »
Something I haven't been able to get through my thick head. On multi laminated bows the glue joint(it would seem to me) would go through the same stress, maybe even more flexing mid limb than a handle that just barely moves. Why don't they come apart? They obviously don't so I'm obviously missing something. What is so tough about gluing a handle? If the glue joint is stronger than the wood (they all claim that) why don't selfbow handles pop off? Actually I do remember someone posting one.

Offline Badger

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #21 on: June 24, 2014, 09:50:17 pm »
 Don, I have wondered this same thing a million times. It is much easier to split off an osage with a wedge than it is to split off a glued handle. The only explanation I have is that when it is naturally laminated it bends at the same rate as the wood, when glued we have a straight line where it has almost infinite stress right on the tip when you bend it. Natural wood spreads out some of the load where a laminate offers the stress a very concentrated spot to start lifting. Very often when a handle splits off it will take wood with it.

Offline vinemaplebows

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #22 on: June 24, 2014, 09:57:42 pm »
I do as Mr. Krewson does on iffy handles. 1/8 lams are the way to go.....I will be trying the adding wood to the back, as you can make a more forward sitting handle that way. :)
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Offline Badger

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #23 on: June 24, 2014, 10:03:54 pm »
  The flite bow I posted last week I used a 7/16 lam and built it up with 1/8 lams, seems to be holding up ok.

Offline PatM

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #24 on: June 24, 2014, 10:16:51 pm »
Remember that people will often use a different wood or switch the grain around when gluing on a handle. That likely changes the stress in a glued on handle relative to a handle that is part of the stave.

Don Case

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #25 on: June 25, 2014, 01:38:47 am »
I was reading one of Dels old posts and he said he's glued a piece of leather between the pieces of wood to act as a flex joint. Has anyone tried this?

Offline bubby

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #26 on: June 25, 2014, 02:04:29 am »
it still comes down to design, if it bends in the fades it will pop, if your work is poor and the mating surfaces don't match the properties of the glue, it will pop, even epoxies will fail
multiple lams feathered out thru the fades don't pop with tt3 when properly executed, epoxie not nessesary
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Offline Eric Krewson

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #27 on: June 25, 2014, 10:12:20 am »
There are glues and there are glues, I have never had a handle that didn't pop off back in the old days when I used Two Ton epoxy, on the reverse, I have never had one pop off since I started using urac. Due to a senior moment on the bandsaw, I cut a beautiful stave to about 7/16" thick in the  handle, I glued on my thin lams to build the handle up and it is still in place 7 years later.

On thing I always do is orientate the grain on my shims just like the grain on the bow, in other words, no quarter sawn lams and the grain orientation on the lam will be the same as the stave grew on the tree with a back and a belly.

Offline Easternarcher

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #28 on: June 25, 2014, 11:36:53 am »
I do 99percent of my risers with lams. I find I get a better fit(glue joint) and if the design imparts a bit of deflex in the handle area and fades, I can match that with the flexible lams and still get tight glue joints...
Never had a handle pop on me using Urac either. Of course I do use a power lam most times as well, but have done without too.
Most lams are about 1/8th inch maybe abit more.

Offline vinemaplebows

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Re: Glued on handle pop quiz
« Reply #29 on: June 25, 2014, 04:51:02 pm »
There are glues and there are glues, I have never had a handle that didn't pop off back in the old days when I used Two Ton epoxy, on the reverse, I have never had one pop off since I started using urac. Due to a senior moment on the bandsaw, I cut a beautiful stave to about 7/16" thick in the  handle, I glued on my thin lams to build the handle up and it is still in place 7 years later.

On thing I always do is orientate the grain on my shims just like the grain on the bow, in other words, no quarter sawn lams and the grain orientation on the lam will be the same as the stave grew on the tree with a back and a belly.

Interesting, what brand, and what set time?? I have never had a problem with Devcon 2-ton slow set...30 minute plus. The quick set is junk! You must, and I mean MUST mix it well.
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