Hi Guys!
I am getting close to roughing out an ash stave for my first bow and a number of questions are popping up already.
I wanted to source my stave myself and started with a piece of Ash I found in the woods. I know it is prefered to cut down the tree yourself, but this is not allowed where I live. So I will have to make do with what I can find. There was some worm under the bark, so I chased a few thin outer rings until I got to a nice thick one and the worm holes were gone.
While drying in the last two weeks, the stave developed a bit of a propellor twist and a reflex
The stave is currently a bit more then 2inch wide
I suppose the reflex is a good thing.
The propellor twist is most severe on the end of one of the legs. but the stave is still a bit long, so can shorten the bow and avoid most of it.
I wanted to steam and recurve the tips, but I am not sure if that's a good idea on ash. The bowyers bible Vol 1 says that a recurve will make the bow much more efficient, but vol2 warns against it because it will increase the strain on the wood and result in more set, so it might not always be a good idea.
Would now be a good time to steam and recurve + straighten (after cleaning up the wood a bit)
Since I started from a branch, I have a few knots that I need to work with and around the handle, I am currently going through the soft pith in the hearth of the stave.
How should I work around the pith? just leave it? or remove wood from the belly at the handle until I have all the pith removed?
The wood is thick enough that I can probably cut out some of the knots, But on others I would weaken the leg too much. Is there a way to work with them or am I doomed and should I look for a new stave?
Cheers,
Tim
EDIT: Pictures
EDIT2: I had a lot of trouble trying to figure out how to upload pictures. If they are distorted it is because of my first bad upload. Force reload your browser should help reload them
https://superuser.com/questions/405811/how-to-reload-a-page-in-opera-without-cache/1244423Sorry for this