Since getting relocated to eastern NM, I've been using red oak exclusively(nothing else here) to get back into bow making. I can't get this stuff to bend without taking way too much set.
Is it the Red Oak or is it me?I've been
tillering by either using only a mirror or using a tillering stick with a straight edge out to about 20 inches of draw then using a mirror till final draw. Bows keep taking set regardless of how I do it. Decided to make one more D bow, since i couldn't bring myself to making a handle bow despite my earlier rant about them(just didn't feel right to me). I WAS VERY CAREFUL ABOUT NOT STRAINING THE WOOD, PULLING ONLY TO DESIRED WEIGHT, WATCHING FOR HINGES/STIFF SPOTS. Here's what i got....
This tiller looks about right for me. Full compass/circular tiller, bendy tips. I may be holding it not in the center. I haven't wrapped a handle or finished it yet. This one is 69 inches tip to tip pulling only about 42#@28 inches. Backed with a strip of linen because the grain wasnt great.
Set is close to like 2 inches.
Here is an even longer one. 71 tip to tip pulling 51#@28 inches. This one's tiller isn't particularly good. Has stiff tips(something I don't bother doing anymore). Would have been better tillered with bendy tips and more bend midlimb. But it bends evenly and shouldn't have taken this much set at that length of wood IMO. GRIPPING IT A BIT TOO HIGH ABOVE CENTER IN PIC. Elliptical tiller may have been better for this long of a bow, but I find the circular one easier to picture in my head and design.
Set is excessive.
Front Profiles. Simple design. Handle widest part of the bow. Last 10 inches or so taper to the tips.
MY SOCKS DON'T MATCH. I NOTICED. And you get a beautiful view of what Eastern New Mexico looks like in the background
No bow wood. Any help or critique appreciated. Happy Labor Day
Dic