Now some might think I decided to do all heartwood because I messed up running it through the bandsaw... I couldn't possibly comment
Anyhow the original stave was way out of line and bent like a dogs back leg. I did a good bit of bending at the grip to get it to line up. On the lower limb there was a BIG knot going right through which was showing signs of cracking across on the belly. I rasped out a big scallop and patched it. The patch is ugly as sin and totally ruins the look of the bow
... oh, sorry, I mean it is near invisible.
http://bowyersdiary.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/knot-what-knot.htmlIt's made for a left hander, but will just shoot right handed with a bit of a shift of hand position.
50# at 28" 65 1/2 ttt, limb width about 1.75", (a bit wider at the knots)
Shoots nicely, it's had 90 arrows through it, about a dozen left handed to check the arrow pass. I'm getting quite good shooting left handed now
The back isn't a single ring, but all the violations run along the length of the limbs... it's somewhere between 1/4 sawn and ring backed... I had to get it out of the stave however I could. Interesting to see an all heartwood bow with a back patch and not ring followed seems fine. (Mind it is Yew... not that funny colonial orange stuff
)
It's got a nice bit of character whilst still being a good field shooting bow.
The lower limb has a little deflex out of the fade and I can't take that out with heat 'cos that's where the back patch is, so it may look weak, but trust me, it isn't
With it lying flat on the floor, the grip and the limbs (a bit in from the tips) all sit flat with the limb tips being about 1.5" off the floor.
More pics on the blog of course...
Del