When I bamboo back a bow, I have backed about 50 so far, I make every edge of the bamboo stem to stern 1/16" thick, this naturally tapers the bamboo to the tips.
If you make your bamboo very thin you end up with bamboo backed osage bow. If you leave your bamboo thick you will end up with an osage belly bamboo bow with very little osage on the belly at normal poundages.
Eric,
If your boo gets naturally tapered when you do the 1/16" everywhere method, then I assume you are using a smaller diameter diameter boo that what I see in Arvins pics? In which case the high crown serves as a trapping?
Having a flatter back would, in theory, reduce the the likelihood of a tension break in a highly strained bow. Arvin can proportion the back width to the belly width as he chooses to balance the materiel properties.
If you have a warbow shooting friend...get out the boat winch and put a string on it... LOL I could only venture to guess at how heavy that bow is right now but I'd say way more than anyone could ever draw. Bamboo backing PLUS the power the glue line creates is like a modern bow with natural materials...and hard to beat.
Bob,
I think Arvin intends to tiller the belly until he reaches his weight goal for the class? If his osage gets less than 1/3 the limb thickness, he can always tiller the width if he is concerned?
Not sure about the "power the glue line creates" with this bow. Do you do a perry reflex on boo backed glue ups?