I was making a bow for another sites "Bow in the hat" post, I started out with a 50 inch ash short bow, reduced it down, heat bent it into reflex, sinewed it and worked on finish tiller. In the process I noticed small chrysals on the belly of each limb. I know the tiller is off, as you will see in the pics. one thing that you will notice is that it should have bent more in the handle. I should also have not tryed for 28in for this bow. Maybe 24in max. but I've made them before so I tryed again. I know whats causing the chrysals is thin spots where they are formed. So basically hinges.
Now, my question is could I have caused chrysals by "helping" the limbs back to straight after unstringing? I have another short bow identical to this one that I have done this with many times over the last year or two and I noticed the same condition on this bow. Or in your opinions is it just a design issue? It's not retaining set since after helping it back to straight it stays that way.
Secondly, with the sinew backing, will the chrysals matter that much compared to an unbacked bow where it will eventually fail. could this bow just develop them, and then continue to hold together due to the sinew, or will they continue deeper until failure?
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