Hi all,
I recently got hold of a pair of Gemsbok horns. Using a dremel and a carefully laid out line, I cut the straighter of the two horns in half. The left one half of a horn in a reflexed position and the other half in a deflexed position. I soaked the horn in water for a few days and straightened the deflexed half so it was straight.
I then needed to get to the flattening of the inside concave part of the horn, which was approximately half of it's length. Having read Ed's how to guide I used my gas top stove (unfortunately I don't have a heat gun) to heat the horn over an open flame. I've used an open flame exclusively for any dry heat, so I have a decent feeling for how to heat without burning.
Vise at the ready, I heated up 3" of the thick end of the horn for a good few minutes and quickly put it in the vise. as I closed the jaws, I heard a crack. Lo and behold, the horn cracked exactly at the "crown" of the half. The crack is just visible from both the inside and outside of the horn for about 2 1/2".
I naturally assumed that the horn was too thick to bend, so I thinned it out with a dremel round grinding tool and then sandpaper to make it even. It's now around 1/8" thick when viewed down from the thick side. I tried again a bit further along the horn so that the crack couldn't interfere, and once again it simply cracked without so much as bending a millimeter.
I was considering simply taking down the sides with a draw knife as you would do with bamboo - but that would probably only leave me with 7/8" total width at the widest as it narrows down to the tip.
Am I missing anything about the process? Is the horn still too dry despite days of soaking? Is my heat not sufficient? Is it too much and therefore making the horn too brittle to bend?
Alternatively, could I use a horn strip less than an inch wide to make a 44" Turkish bow? I'm only looking for approximately 50# draw weight at 29". It'll be attached to either a bamboo or a balau core which are both 3/16" thick.
Thanks a lot,