Greetings y'all,
Been lurking on here for awhile trying to glean as much information as possible on bow building. I just started out a few months ago because I saw a few videos on Youtube and decided to try my hand at bow building. The first bow I tried to build was a red oak longbow based on the design from GoGeronimo. After shooting this for awhile I decided to make a white oak longbow of the same dimensions. Anyhow, after following the bow design from GoGeronimo's page I have been left with one broken and one almost completely broken bow (Not implying his designs are flawed, but just to give background on the methods I used).
Both bows have cracks running across the backs of the bow, perpendicular to the grain. Seems to me that these are tensile cracks. However, my question is this: what is the most probable cause? I used red oak for one bow and white oak for the other. Both have fairly straight, clean grains. I figure that the cause of the damage comes down to: improper tillering, handle length being too long, limbs being too thick.
Improper tillering leading to breakage is obvious, however I believe took the correct steps in making the bow bend. The reason I suspect one of the other two causes is at fault is because a long handle restricts what proportion of the rest of the bow can bend meaning that more of the work is done by less of the limbs. This might explain the tensile cracks, and might go hand in hand with the limb thickness. On the second bow I was really straining to string up the bow and I believe the thicker handles were less elastic meaning they couldn't bend as much meaning that force put into the limbs caused the limbs to fail at any draw past its brace. Which brings me back to tillering...
In summary this is where I'm at with my bow building...trying to figure out how to build my first bow that doesn't break, but understand why the other two did. If any of yall have experience with this I would love to get some feedback!