I have a 12", 1/2 hp, Craftsman model #113.243310 bandsaw- bought it new ~32 years ago for woodworking. With it I've roughed out maybe 30 hickory and oak selfbows from staves up to 3 wide, ripped off ~200 of lams, bellies and backings from 1.5 to 2" thick hickory, IPE, maple, osage, cherry, walnut and oak boards and profiled and cut handles in around 60 bows. Roughing out bows from wide hickory staves really pushes the limits of the saw but its doable if cut like in the attached sketch.
The keys things are tuning the saw when needed (more frequently than one might think....), a sharp/clean blade, not feeding too fast and practice (e.g. saw way outside of the line or on a scrap of same or similar wood). For tuning, there's lots on the web but I've found Mark Duginske's "Band Saw Handbook" the best source. Cool blocks help a lot also since they can be set really close to the blade. For blades, I use 1/2", 3 tpi raker tooth- mostly .025" thick.
That said, Id definitely spring for a 14, 1 hp band saw if I had space in the shop for it- and the required (IMHO) dust collector. As it is, a big and frequently emptied
shop vac handles the 12 saw (a plus for the 12, 1/2 hp saw
).
c.d.