Hey fellas,
Ya know I usually make short Eastern woodland styled bows, and that they are usually plain as in no backing, heat treat, or only seldom some steam straightening. I was looking at my bows yesterday and it dawned on me that not one of my whitewood bows would qualify as wide and thin. All of them are rectangular in section.
I grabbed 5 bows and did the measurements. 4 are bows I made and the one is the bow that Don Burchett sent me. There is a list of the bows and the particulars. I have pics of unbraced, braced, and full draw for you to look at.
52" Ojibwa, ironwood, 58#@26 (55#@25") 1-1/16" wide and .602" thick, no set
39" Eastern woodland, black locust scrap, 40#@20", 1-1/8" wide and .495"thick, 1" of set
42-1/2" Ojibwa, slippery elm scrap, 44#@21", 15/16 wide and .530 thick, 5/8 " set
49" ocean spray, eastern woodland, 57#@25", 1-1/4" wide and .611" thick, 1/2" of Reflex
57-1/2 Mollegabet, Ironwood, 54#@26" 1-1/4@fades and 1-1/16"@levers, .650" and .502" respectively.
Anyway, I wonder where the idea of whitewood needing to be wide (and thin) to make good bows came from, since my experience says that the Native American whitewood bows were not built that way but rather closer to rectangular or square in section.
This square section bows are very snappy, take little set, and seem to be good bows in all respects. Any opinions welcome.
rich