Can I get a good, sinew-backed bow from a heartwood stave, without chasing a ring?
The story: I'm attempting to build a sinew-backed, rocky mountain juniper bow. I had a pyramid bow roughed out with my best sapwood stave, and broke it. Almost broke my heart too, it was so beautiful.
But onward we go. I split off a nice heartwood stave, so I'm working that next. Going to try a sudbury style profile on this one with recurved tips, or at least flipped.
I've been trying to chase a ring, and it isn't working. I've never chased a ring before so I have no frame of reference, but it seems like these rings are really, really close. Plus the wood is really soft. So I keep getting these tiny violations. (see pic) I'm afraid I'm going to run out of wood before I get a pristine back.
So, what happens if I just get it as smooth as possible, sort-of-follow a ring, but have numerous small violations, then sinew it? I really think that might be the best I can do...Is good enough good enough, or do I need to persevere at risk of ruining the stave? Should I bother proceeding?