I’ve recently written about putative benefits of trapped backs, or crowned backs.
Since then, I’ve made six crowned-back bows from branches up to 3 cm (1.25”) wide, and toasted bellies. All between 50” and 60” (3x Plum, 2x Hawthorn, 1x Rose), I tried to test them extensively, monitor all kinds of data, shoot them a lot and chrono them. Since then, I’ve broken three of them.
Incidentally, these three were the most reflexed bows with the lowest set (retaining up to 1.5” net reflex after shooting, losing less than 0.5” relative to resting profile), and with calculated back tensions that were very close to the expected limit (0.9 to 1.1% back elongation). These were branch bows with some pins, and two of them clearly broke due to tension failures that involved these pins. A third one was "just" overstrained in the back. These broken bows shot very well according to my standards (>170 fps@ 10 gpp, 30-35# bows). One of them shot 178 fps at 10 gpp, twice in a row, when I pulled it one inch further (27 instead of 26”) than intended for the bow. The third time, it broke
. Pushed the limits too far.
The still intact branch bows are decent but not exceptional shooters, shooting around 160-165 fps at 10 gpp (or 150-155 fps at 13 gpp). Incidentally, most of them took some set in the round branch handle, as the belly there is narrow (round), yielding a weak belly spot resulting in net handle deflex. Set in the limbs themselves is rather limited. This results in a lower strain design for a given draw length. (the last bow, made from a wild Rose branch took 1.5" of set in the limbs).
So what have I learned? Probably what you all already knew, but what I still needed to experience first-hand. Crowned designs spare the belly (low to absent set), but heavily stress the back. Crowned backs strained close to their limit will eventually fail, especially when they are littered with imperfections such as pins. The difficulty in dealing with crowned backs lies in defining acceptable back tension limits and associated degrees of back crown. Trapped backs, with at least a nice flat plateau, seem safer.
What’s next? I’ll continue making some branch bows, but will decrown them a bit and add a more tension-safe plant fiber backing to replace the wood that I removed. Hopefully, this will allow me to keep these bows shooting 170 fps instead of breaking them within the first 100 shots
Joachim