Hammish, I'm going to SC in August to visit my family, and I have access to thousands of acres of forrest, some of it is virgin, never cut. My bud will let me cut what I want, and there is plenty of just about any tree you can think of that grows in the SE. I'm planning on cutting a hickory or two, maybe an elm, and some hop-hornbeam. I've never wanted to build hickory bows for sluggish moisture reasons, but now that I'm out here seeing what this weather is like, I want to make some fire-hardened hickory bows for sure.
To be fair, all the Bows I've had fail over the last couple of years have been attempts at turning a few of my lesser staves into something great...and I've pushed the limits on all but one. I overbuilt the heck out of one...very long and wide with a draw weight of just over 50 lbs...and it still popped a splinter.
The bow that exploded was the first to fail in compression...no ticks, no set, no indication anything was wrong till I was standing there holding nothing but a limp string and trying to assess if I was OK without moving.
It was 62" long, stiff handle, top limb 1.5" longer than bottom. Approximate width of just under 1.5" from fades to start of taper then even taper to tips. Parallel max width portion of limbs was ~11' then the taper. ~ 6" of stiffer tips that were reflexed to just shy of recurved, and the tips were working some. 1/8' positive tiller, and the bend looked great. I was using a 12 strand b-50 string and bow was pulling 34.7# at 27"...my 12 yo son's freakishly ape armed current DL.
The stave looked flat before backing, but when chasing a ring, the sapwood dove down toward the belly and ran almost center down the length of the bow. It basically looked like the reverse of a hollow-limb bow. Basically, it was a "hollow-back" bow, and I tried to keep limb thickness even across the profile by rounding the belly (convex) to approximate the concavity of the back. I'm sure I was not perfect with this endeavor...but close, and the bend was beautiful.
The main issue beyond the hollow back was that the furrow that ran pretty much center down the length of the back of the bow...well, it ran off the side of the bow about 1" before the reflexed tips began. I made the area as stiff as the tips hoping low tension here would prevent popping a splinter. The run off caused some twist on each limb in opposite directions at rest, but at brace, the limbs twisted into perfect alignment and stayed that way during the draw
I didn't think I could pull it off without popping a splinter at one of the limbs where this furrow or ditch jogged off the side of the bow, but after making it and tillering it and putting an initial 20 shots thru it, I was thinking that I had pulled it off...I figured it might eventually lift a splinter, but I'd just glue it and sinew back it if that happened.
It was a great bow for ~29 shots. The failure originated In the weaker top limb right in the center of where the dip ran off the side of the bow. I realize I was pushing an iffy design on an iffy stave, but when it failed, It blew pieces of osage all over the driveway.
I'm going to try to gently rehydrate all of my staves. I'm going to overbuild until I see some moisture content above 6%. I appreciate your input. I just need to pull the reigns on my ambition sometimes, as I was definitely hoping to magically defy the laws of physics on this last disaster.