Yesterday, a friend of mine wanted to try out some of my bows. We grabbed a few of them and a bunch of random arrows and headed out onto the lawn. Among the bows we brought was my pride and joy since a few weeks back. A bow made from common hazel pulling 50# to 27". Hazel is surprisingly strong in compression, and despite the sort of narrow design the bow still had 2" of the original 3" of reflex that the character-laden stave had to begin with, and this with no heat treatment. The bow ended up being 2,5 ounces lighter than what Gardner recommends in TBB. Equipped with a thin lightweight FF string, the bow shot crazy fast.
Anyway, I put the bow in the hands of my friend. And he shot it nicely and correctly, by the looks of it. That is, apart from the fact that the bow literally exploded at the exact moment of him releasing the arrow. Shocked, we both stood there staring at the debris for a few seconds. Then some detective work started.
This is what happened. The arrow he shot was an old arrow with a nock that was wider than the string, so the nock didn't fit tightly on the string. My friend, who isn't a very experienced archer, thought afterwards that he may not have had the string firmly at the bottom of the nock of the arrow, but that there was a slight gap. When he then released, the string travelled an eighth of an inch or so before hitting the arrow. This extra force, combined with the fact that the string was unusually thin, split the arrow shaft down the middle. And when the bow then slammed home, it was basically like dry shooting the bow, that is, shooting it with no arrow. The strain from this probably caused some serious vibrations in the bow, and it cracked close to a large knot on the lower limb, shortly followed by a shower of splinters.
This made me feel so very stupid. A few wraps of string around the arrow nock would probably have saved the bow. Or just a normal, safe string.
Have any of you guys done any stupid mistakes that resulted in a broken bow?