Hi all. I've been around here a few months, reading a ton, making to date backed bows and some laminated limbs. I'm having issues though.
It started horrible, over clamping at totally starving a couple handle joints when using EA-40. I cleaned, roughed up, and reduced the pressure and got a good hickory backed cedar bow....until the handle started delaminating at the fades. I cut it off, rinsed and repeated and have a fine 68" 42#@31" d/r bow I've been shooting. I went to repeat the process (to increase the bow weight) and ran into the handle issue again and the reglue is holding but I'm dealing with cracks on the hickory backing.
Trying to back off and 'do it right' I've started an 63" Ipe/boo bow with about 2" reflex, no deflex. Currently 50# only at brace height. I was tillering yesterday and heard a pop. The handle popped clean off, pretty as you please. I could see epoxy residue on both ends but pretty much nothing in the center. See above about rinse and repeat - sanded flat, cleaned, toothed and glued again with EA40, hardly clamping at all. So far so good.....but....after coming out of the heat box and cooling I am now seeing glue lines opening up between the boo and ipe.
I should say I'm curing in a heat box at 160-170 with forced air, 12 hours or so, and unclamping after cooling. I'm applying pressure with inner tubes and clamps to hold it on the form. I'm really trying no to over clamp or wrap too tight.
Does anything jump out at anyone as to what I seem to be systematically doing wrong? I'm trying really hard to not to apply gorilla pressure. I guess a few questions too.
1) Can you safely heat treat a bow in a heat box multiple times?
2) Is there a good way to judge clamping and inner tube wrapping pressure?
3) I'm thinking about band sawing off the back and trying to glue up yet again. Thoughts? Or just keep tillering until failure?
Thanks in advance.