Heh guys,
This a bow I finished up in May, this was a replacement for a bow that I made for a friend that later de-laminated and it just wasn't a good bow anyway. I made this from a Rudderbows Archery Native American Replica bow blank, this one was the Oneida type I believe. It was a 65" long hickory blank and it was floor-tillered so I did the rest of the tillering and the finish work. While I believe that I did the hardest part alone, I can not say I made the bow entirely by myself. It is 55#@29", after breaking in it had some handshock which I was displeased with but after I glued some cork underneath the leather handle wrap the problem disappeared but I would like to make bows without handshock with a bare wood grip and not have to rely on a handle wrap to dampen it in the future. I tried Fiebing's Medium Brown Leather Dye for the 'stain' and its finished in 3 coats of Satin Helmsman Spar Urethane. The handle wrap is brown deer leather and the strike plate is calf hair. The bow took 1 7/8" set. The only profile pic I have is it lying next to a bow that broke the same day I was taking pictures but I included it to help to see if my tiller is appropriate for the bow's design. I was kind of proud of myself with this bow because I thought it was the best tillering job I have done yet but it did take 1 7/8" of set, the handshock without a handle wrap, and the fact that I could only get it to send a 545 grain arrow 120 yards when the bow that broke, which had 2 5/8" of set, sent an arrow 11 yards further, means there is still some room for improvement. Let me know what you guys think.
Thanks,
Aaron