I'm about to start a couple of wider than normal bows (for me anyway) paddle style bows and wish to back them with bamboo. The issue I have is that thinning it down enough leaves me with with one of two problems: 1) Either the center is left unthinned so I get the edges nice and thin and correct width at it's widest but I'm left with a hollow from the centre of the boo or 2) If I thin enough to get a flat surface, I end up narrowing it too much and it no longer fits.
Is it possible to either split a pair of boo strips, thin them and then splice longitudinally to fit the wide back of the bow, or use something like a round plane/end of belt sander etc. to remove pith somewhat consistently across the whole arc.
If the latter, is there any issue with bubbles forming underneath when gluing up a convex surface onto a flat plane, or does the clamping compress it enough that it's not an issue.
I'm limited to using ~8" boo culms at the moment, so going bigger diameter to give me less arc to work with isn't really an option at this stage.
Cheers
Steve