Hi guys... first a little background. Last year I had a great time creating my first primitive arrows to shoot out of a purchased self bow - shooting around the handle, no shelf cut out. I was so excited to do so any things I had never done... use sinew, make and use pine pitch glue, bone points, Knapp stone and glass... I made arrows I was really proud of but looking back I feel I didn't give spine it's due diligence. Coming from surewood dug fir I introduced to many variables at once... 33" (pre self knocks & point halfting) red Osier dogwood & wild rose shoots weaken spine d/t length, their natural taper make it more forgiving, my bone and glass and obsidian points less than 125 gr stiffen spine.
I know this is a little long and being on the new side it feels complex but what I'm hoping for is so thoughts, conversation, tips on building shafts out of natural shafting with the intention of shooting around a self bow handle... I have good access to red Osier dogwood and wild rose to work with. My natural tendency was to build shafts way to stiff and heavy so I'm using a Don adams spine tester and grain scale to try and be consistent as possible.
Currently I'm shooting a 60" tip to tip elm self bow #55 @ 28
To experiment I'm building (3) 33" dogwood arrows with a spine average of 500, bare shaft weight 530- 560gr I plan to glue on 125gr steel tips. So finish weight pushing an estimated 700gr... still sounds heavy to me!
I've read and understand stiff side of shafting toward bow but sometimes natural shafting has a little bend you can't get rid of. Does anyone consider this while building or ignore it?
If I was going to build Doug fir parallel bought wood shafts what spine would you use for this bow? Are there any generalizations that can be said... how much weaker should the arrow be to go around the handle?
Thanks guys for your thoughts on any piece of this or what works for you. I know the bottom line is what shoots straight out of the bow and I'm looking for that... just thought maybe I could shorten the experimenting with your input. Jim