Hi Folks
Thanks for contributing
First of all I'd like to mention, that my quick and dirty drawing was completly exaggerated...the idea was a mild r/d with max 2" deflex/reflex over a bow of 65" - not some kind of scythian bow
But regardless of that idea edge grain to me seems very strange and different (and interesting) in many ways.
Yes, there must be a grain flow but: You do not have the layers of early and latewood...the wood is acting much more homogenous.
Now, what does that mean for bow building? Can you tiller it also from the back? Probably yes. Probably the back must be less critical than on a normal bow. I heard they cut bombproof edge grained backings, obviously unable to really follow or care about the flow of grain. When do you violate the "back", what's the "back" and where would it exactly be on an edge grained bow? Is it maybe where the stave splits? How important is it really? The mysteries of edge grain
Why are they not built more often?
Cheers