Hi I'm Loosenock, thought I would introduce myself and ask a question. I am 60 years old, live in Colorado, married 33 years, Viet Nam veteran and have been making hand forged knives for 35 years.
I am in the process of making my 1st bow from Yew sister billets. I got a couple of nice straight 1/4 logs off of ebay. These sections were air dried for a year. Usiing a draw knife and spoke shave I cleaned one of the logs up and split it into billets and worked the billets down a little further.
The target bow for the project will be an English style longbow 66"-68" in length with a weight of 40-45 #'s @ my 26" draw length.
The billets have nice sap wood about 5/16 to 3/8 inch thick, straight with one small pin knot, the dark heart wood is dark and has so many growth rings you cant count them, they're a blur.
One of the billets is going to be perfect, while using the spoke shave the growth riings are symetrical and feather out nicely all the way to the tip. The other billet, if it continues to pan out the way it is going, the growth rings will begin to run off to one side about 1 foot from the tip. The sap wood will still be in the same plane as the other billet and squarely on the back, but the growth ring feathering is going to make a little dip on one side. If you were looking through a cross section of the limb towards the tip, the feathering of the growth rings would run from 12 o'clock near the handle to maybe 1:30 or 2 o'clock towrad the tip. I dont think this is going to be a problem but I thought I would check with the experts so I dont get into trouble. Anyone see a disaster in the making here?
Which of the billets would you use for the bottom limb?
Should I make the limb with a the twist a little stronger?
Any help or suggestions you care to share would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks much,
Joe