Heh guys,
I finished my third successful bow last week, it only took me months to finish it. I made it for a friend and he was impressed by it, he is a newcomer to the more traditional forms of archery, having shot only compounds before. It is a board bow, red elm backed with hickory. It is 66" long ttt, 64" long ntn, 4" handle, I put bloodwood tip overlays on it because I thought it would be a nice touch. It was sealed with Spar Varnish, no stain, I painted his initials on the upper limb at his request. If I were to give this bow a name it would either be 'Merciless Set', for the set it took, or 'Teacher', for the lessons I learned from it. This was my first bow with a rigid handle, the other two bows I made and are still shooting bend in the handle and this is the first bow I made where I hit the target weight instead of coming in too light. I glued this thing up in the most primitive way possible, I glued it up with wood glue and piled bricks on top of it three high because I did not have enough clamps or split bicycle tubes and I wanted to see what would happen. The gluing process worked fine except that I neglected to thin down the 3/16" hickory backing at all, which I learned is a mistake. This bow took quite a bit of set, I'd say from 2.5-3", I didn't measure, which I think not thinning the backing could have contributed to the problem but my tillering and the neglect of checking moisture content of the materials before gluing them up also could have been the culprit. Either way, I ended up with a 55# flatbow at 29", which was my goal and I shot almost 100 arrows from it before he came to pick it up and I think it shoots well and he really likes it, and that's what really matters after all. I think this is my best bow so far, I did a much better job reaching the target weight and I did a better job finishing it, although there are some band saws marks on the backing strip that I tried to sand off but I couldn't do as good of a job as I would've liked, I sanded on the back a lot and they just would not come out and I didn't want to miss my target weight but my friend hasn't said a word about it either, but I think my tiller could have been better. Your advice and critiques are greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Aaron