Thank you for the encouragement fellas....Turtle, I seen your bows mine aint got a damned thing on yours at all....Stix, just an old man lookin to keep the cabin fever from setting in
Well fellas, since I got to wait on the bearings to get here thought I would work on my Penobnscott. My bows are all short and all about 50-55 in weight so I can cut them pretty close right off the band saw. That means I can hand tool mine right away. The wood is Osage, main bow is 50" overall, with a 28" back bow. The back bow will only be 25" between the knocks but I wanted some extra carving material for the fineals.
First I wanted to straighten out the bows to get the bend arcs in a straight line so I steamed both bows and straightened them laterally. I took pictures of the bows next to a straight edge so you can see what got done....then a pic next to the straight edge afterward and also one with the bows set on top of each other to show the lineal alignment.
Then I tillered out both bows ( the back bow may need to have some weight taken off) The main bow is right at 50@25 but the backbow is still real stout. Thats as far as I got today and tomorrow I will set the final reflex for the back bow. I'm leaving the bow tips straight like the "early" versions for 2 reasons. First I really like the looks especially in the braced and full draw profiles.....and second, the bow is plenty short to hunt with as is so I dont need to shorten up it's draw space.
There is a picture of the bows on top of each other from the side so you can see the one whoopty-doo that I'm leaving and tiller around.....when ya look at the braced and draw disregard that for judging the bend....I expect the bow to be right....even with the dinger.
So tomorrow I hope to tie them together (temporarily) to judge the total draw weight....then I can proceed with the finishing touches...like carving etc.etc. so here are the pics ...more than one set
rich