Hey there Primitive Archer community, again, I'm still knew, and I'm working on my first osage orange selfbow (longbow).
I made a big mistake with the drawknife while putting my bow to final dimensions today and I cannot believe I did it.
The bow I am making was looking to be a mighty fine 68" snakey bow, all was going well, I have managed to follow the grain pretty true despite some complications with the way the stave warped around a knot on its sister stave.
I was narrowing down the stave, I had planned to make the bow wide in the horizontal dimension (left to right when holding the bow upright) and really thin in the anterior/posterior dimensions because thats just how the stave ended up looking after carving out some deep cracks that occurred after not sealing the back. AND THEN IT HAPPENED.
I started carving out a piece of grain on the edge of the bow that had a crack in it that could not be left on the bow, and I curse myself because my draw knife bit way too deep, and that single fiber ran deeper, and deeper, and deeper....
Now Im left with a decent and nearly complete bow, except there is now a portion 12 inches from the center that is only 7/8" wide, and 3/4" deep.
So what would you make of that? Don't say scrap it immediately, I want to give it a fighting chance. Is my only option to continue to tillering and even things out as much as possible, and end up with a reaaaaallly light poundage bow? Will heat treating or maybe adding a recurve to it possibly up the poundage? Remember, there isn't exactly anything "wrong" with the stave, its just really thin in that one spot, but everything follows the grain really well and true, no cracks or check or anything like that.
Help me out! Thanks a lot selfbowyers!