OK, so someone told me that White Oak makes a good backing material, so I gave it a go. I had some red oak laying around so I thought I'd do two things, test out some Resorcinol Resin that I just got in the mail AND see if white oak makes a good backing material...
I made a Red Oak bow backed with White Oak, and both were quarter sawn. It was 2" wide and 70" long. I had it tillered beautifully on the long string to around 42 pounds, so I put a proper length string on it and started exercizing it on the bowflex, and when I had it tillered to 24" it cracked...
The quarter sawn white oak lifted a huge splinter.
So, trying to see if this was a fluke, or was rather what should be expected out of white oak, I flipped the bow over, stuck it in my vise, and bent it until I heard the first crack. The 4th picture where you see the limb bent to 90 degrees is where I heard the first crack. It exploded shortly after that.
On a good note, the Resorcinol worked MARVELOUSLY! It literally ripped the wood apart at the breaking point, proving that the glue is truly stronger than the wood.
OK, so DOES white oak actually make a good backing material after all, and I just had a fluke crack? Or should I just stick to hickory?
(PS, I do actually have a couple white oak trees in the yard that we need to fall, so out of curiosity, I may start on a selfie as soon as they're down and seasoned)