after seeing your handle pic in this post I was curious if the bottom lam is the same thickness from tip to tip? ie the entire fade is contained in the lighter colored handle piece? some bowyers dont have very much success with the glued on handle arrangement. Was the short lam on the back of handle purposely designed to help spread the stress in the fade area?
nice glue lines!
tb3?
You're making me go way back in the memory bank here...
1) The bow is 3 lams full length and the ~0.080" thick power lam under the handle area. I don't recall the main lam thicknesses, but the core is thicker than the back and belly lams. I think the back and belly lams were the same thickness. They are all constant thickness, though, with no taper. All the tillering was done by designing the pyramid profile to work with constant thickness limbs. The pyramid shape isn't a true straight sided triangle, it has a bit of an arc to it as that is what you actually need for correct tiller with constant limb thickness.
2) I glued the power lam in towards the back side of the bow because it simplified my layups during the laminating. Structurally it doesn't matter where the power lam is in the stack, just that the overall stack thickness in that area increases as intended.
3) Yes, the lighter wood has all the fade in it and is a glued on piece. The colours vary because I used oak pieces from a number of boards.
4) Yes, TB3 for everything. I think it is a bit soft for laminating like this and is part of the reason the reflex pulled out during shooting in. I am going to try smooth on for the next one.
Since you have asked, I will add a bit more detail. I gave a very basic description of how I did the glue ups, but here are some pics.
Glue up #1 - Belly and core lams glued into deflex:
Glue up #2 - Belly/Core lam assembly pulled into reflex with the back glued on. The back of the bow is up in this pic:
This pic shows how far glue up #1 had to be reflexed for the second glue up:
The end result, something like 1/2" or so of reflex but with the belly pulled into tension like there is 6+" of Perry reflex:
The handle pieces. The thin one is the overlay on the back, the other on the belly side:
The handle pieces glued on and part way through shaping. I liked using the drill press with Forstner bits for hogging off the majority and will definitely use that again on big, chunky grips:
Mark