Jan, thanks for doing this testing.
First, I haven't read all the comments on this post.
Here some thoughts:
Your design is a mass saving design, which is ok with tension strong wood (like BL or others). But you can do a lot easier going with a trapped profile or a high crown sapling. The only difference I see is your design is more problematic for torque.
You have made a stiff handled bow. Not good with the excessive grain run out at the fade area. It is probably better to go with a bendy handle bow with no narrowed grip.
Your sketch with the tension and compresssion forces doesn't show the real forces. The farther from the neutral plane the higher is the stress. In other words: the forces are not equal in the compression area (black) or the tension (white) area. Will say the more you can save the (unnecessary) mass near the neutral plane – the greater is the total effect of mass saving. Hope you can follow my bad English. Think on an extreme profile of your design, which will put the neutral plane in the real middle of an U.
At least: To bad your not working on real HLD bows, sorry to say that – but I believe your skills would be better invested in turning the bows back into the belly. But thank you anyway!
Simon, thank you for your thoughts. I must admit that I doubted for some time whether I should respond. That you do not agree, okay. But the tone of your posts in particular surprised me. But maybe, because I am a little sensitive on this subject, I'm mistaken. So, I will try to explain properly why I can not agree with some of your thoughts. It is also a good opportunity to sharpen my thoughts and exchange more information.
I am afraid it became quite a story....
-Tension strong wood: To me every type of wood seems suitable, because even now you can adapt the design to the wood type. For example, an 80lb ash bow in this configuration does not seem like a good idea, but design (width) or wood type (stronger) can be adjusted.
-Trapped design or high crown sapling. Very unlikely to achieve the same amount of mass saving in a (massive) high crown sapling. Opinion is based on several high crown bows I made, better examples or proof very welcome! I do think this mass saving is possible in an extreme form of a trapped back, with hollow edges, a so called T-profile. Do not know if that's less work .... nice experiment though...let's try it? The curling effect may then expire and maybe it is less stable?
-Torque. See the two pictures above in my answer to Badger. The edges straighten out in a hollow back design. In four bows, so far, torque was not an issue. I have experienced it as a stable design.
-Stiff handle bow and grain: Design for outer form and handle was fixed for this experiment. I tried to make a bow that can be compared to 'normal' pyramid straight flatbows that I have made from similar board staves. Comparison, for the experiment, was therefore the most important, not the optimal shape or wood selection (btw, it is a straight grained bias ringed board stave). I will keep your suggestion in mind when I am going for the optimum.
-The sketch. Yes, that's just what it is, a sketch. A simplified representation to support the story. The pressure zone is a suggestion to represent the train of thought. To avoid confusion I had better omitted the measurements, old habit, sorry.
- Removing mass from Neutral plane and make Extreme U-profile. I'm not sure if I exactly understand the shape you discribe, but it sounds very interesting !! Could you
please upload a sketch?
- Finally, why not a 'real' HLD? Simply because I wanted to see what a hollow back does. And sorry Simon, and with all respect, but to me, this sounds like you think anything outside of your version of hollow limbs is nonsense. That would be a shame.
I know HLD is your baby. And I love that beautiful baby. But there are other babies and they also deserve attention and respect. (And maybe one of them will grow up to be a real big bow).
Maybe it's not good to make a comparison with HLD here, because this topic is about hollow back. And both have their own characteristics and charms. But if we are talking about it.....
Actually, a few weeks ago I did a 'turn around test'. With a scale model of a bamboo stick bow, about 60 cm long. And frankly the results were not such that I continued with the hollow belly in my quest for saving mass.
See pictures below for the model.
With hollow back this bow draws 7 kg when the string is pulled 21 cm.
When turned around (hollow belly) it dropped to 6 kg. And tiller changed in the high stress sections.
My conclusion was that a hollow back can take more draw weight per bow-mass.
Now, of course, it is all about whether that also results in higher arrow speed. Draw weight, or f-d curves, in it self mean nothing. I shot a normal 400 grain arrow through both sides. Not a very good test, I know. But the hollow back performed noticably better.
Further tests with bamboo, also with adapted cross sections according to HLD, make me come to the following
provisional comparison:
- Hollow back: more load per mass, tough draw, stable, rounding of the high edges is dangerous, curling up until sudden flattening and collapse.
- Hollow belly: sweet draw, potential unstable, rounding of the edges creates sweeter draw and more control in tillering, flattening out untill soft collapse.
So if you look for less mass per lb drawweight, hollow back seems to be preferable.
But I
suspect two major benefits of hollow belly, please let the experts judge:
- The flattening out ensures that the pressure has a way to escape. Lateral movement instead of being pressed together. Result: little chance of pressure failures and probably little set. That would mean durable, high performance.
- The high thin edges in the belly are very suitable to heat-treating. Like the point of an all wooden arrow. Heat-treating a hollow belly might contribute a lot to better performance.
And there is another thing: These tests were done with straight bows and full-length cavities. In a bow with strong recurve and short working parts, it might certainly becomes another game...
Okay, I'm trotting on, right? ... all that comparising and suggestions might be something for another topic.