0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Are you looking only for the horizontal tip movement? The recurve will have less movement in that direction, but the tips will move vertically in towards the center of the bow more, so the total distance travelled may not be very different between the two.Brace height may affect the results as well, but I've never looked at that before.Mark
Why???
I dont quite understand,, could you explain a bit, couldnt you just do it with a piece or wire or something,,shaped like a bow
Quote from: bownarra on June 20, 2022, 12:54:03 amWhy??? Just trying to get a better idea of the dynamics that make a bow work the way it does.
The take the tips and recurve them as much as you like, the more the better, string contact at brace at a minimum is preferred, and repeat the above.
Quote from: sleek on June 19, 2022, 06:09:15 pmThe take the tips and recurve them as much as you like, the more the better, string contact at brace at a minimum is preferred, and repeat the above. I forgot to ask before, would you want the bow retillered to suit the recurved tips or do you just want to see the effect of recurving the tips with no other changes? To really get the answer I think the bow should be retillered, then tested.Mark
Quote from: sleek on June 20, 2022, 01:27:20 amQuote from: bownarra on June 20, 2022, 12:54:03 amWhy??? Just trying to get a better idea of the dynamics that make a bow work the way it does.Yes but what I'm asking is what do you think this will prove and why do you think it matters Best to model this. Wooden bows have too many variables from one to the next. Get some glass strips then most of the variables are eliminated or drastically reduced.