Man, I took a break from bow making and now coming back I can't do it! I've goofed up so many bows over the last two weeks.
. The best was the tip flipped the wrong way.
Sorry no pics. Ipe flat American long bow. I planned to do an elb bamboo tri lam first. But later changed my mind and used the off cuts to laminate a riser section. I tried to grind in my fades into the belly wood so they wouldn't flex as shown on the "poor folks bows" page but I didn't want to go too far because my belly was already cut thin.
I laminated on the riser with gorilla hide glue. Got it bending and looking nice. Rawhide backed (thanks Fred Arnold) and that came out awesome.
Getting ready to put the short string on it and I notice that I can feel the fade tips suddenly.
If I gently back bend the riser section I can see they lifted by like an inch or so. One side opens up if I twist on the riser.
IM thinking to fix this I need to get a putty knife under there and pop the riser off. Possibly heat it? Then send scrape the area and reglue with something like urac or even an epoxy? Possibly even add a softer wood lam between the ipe layers? Sugar maple would match the core.
Or is there some super thin and super strong superglue that can be squirted in there, reclamp and be good to go?
I love how the bow is coming out so far.... This aside. I'd like to save it as it is. No agenda in draw weights. Goal is beautiful, functional bow.