Author Topic: Yew Bow  (Read 4921 times)

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Offline Prarie Bowyer

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Re: Yew Bow
« Reply #15 on: October 22, 2014, 01:18:26 pm »
I disagree with the naysayers.  I've had swirly bows work out and straight grain wood snap.  You can't alwayse tell. 

Bamboo backing:  I like to get my bamboo as unprocessed as possible.  Saves money and steps that aren't terribly difficult even with hand tools.  Once your blank is spliced and the seam and back flattened.  I lay it on top of the bamboo strip and trace the outline.  Let your pencil add a tad to the perimiter then saw just outside that.  you'll get about an 1/16 to 1/8th in overhang. 

I then saw the belly taper but stop short of where the riser will cut into the belly  You'll cut that later.  If you are going for deeper reflex deflex sand the belly enough to eliminate or at least serriously reduce the saw marks.  This isn't necessary if you are steam bending the curve in but if you are going to cold bend and glue it then it might cause a problem. 

I like a riser section to be 10 -11 inches long and cut on a VERRY gently curve where it meets the belly.  Pluss I ad a 1/8" strip of contrasting wood.  Makes the seam look nicer.  An exact match and clean curve is hard to get between the curve and the riser block so that strip splits the difference and makes it look nicer.

I use a band saw to cut the perimiter first on the bamboo then cut the thickness down to about an 1/8" or slightly larger.  tilt it at an angle so that you'll cut from both sides and crate a tiny crown down the middle.  I use hand planes and or a belt sander locked in my vise to sand it flat.

Then I use hack saw blades to scratch up the belly of the bamboo and back of the bow blank.  Mark center markes for you riser black and bow parts so they align when you glue them up.

I have interchangeable belly side up gluing blocks that fit to a straight bar of oak with center lines on them and the straight bar. 

I use either unibond or weldwood plastic resin for gluing the boo to the blank but one could use tb3.

after gluing the boo and blank togeather I wrap with shrink wrap and use clapms to get it around my curved riser block, and the ends lifted and then wra the whole thing down with bike tire tubes.  From there into the hot box at 140 for 4-5 hours.

pull it out when done clean the overhang up and glue drips etc then clamp it around your riser block and glue with tb3.

begin tillering and finishing out the bow.  I don't do ANY bow bending untill the boo is glued own.



Offline PEARL DRUMS

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Re: Yew Bow
« Reply #16 on: October 22, 2014, 01:56:58 pm »
I agree nothing is etched in stone. But, those swirls are so bad the chance of a bow even staying straight is slim. Those swirls will pull that bow limb all over heck as he tillers it down. Bamboo backed or not. When grain is running dang near 90 degrees off center, it will fret and crack as it tries to bend in a straight plane. Call me a naysayer if you must. Im good with that title...:)
Only when the last tree has died and the last river has been poisoned and the last fish has been caught will we realize we cannot eat money.

Offline Chadwick

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Re: Yew Bow
« Reply #17 on: October 22, 2014, 06:10:29 pm »
Nay
Nothing flying, Nothing dying