Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: ajbruggink on October 13, 2014, 10:43:19 pm
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Heh guys, I obtained this yew stave a few weeks ago, it was salvaged from a clear cut and the back has seen better days as you can see from my pic where the bark has flaked off, so I'm thinking that either backing it or removing the sapwood would be the best option. I was thinking of either sinew backing it but I was wondering if I have enough heartwood to do that or if I have to leave some sapwood and back it with rawhide. The back of the stave isn't exactly flat, causing one side to have more wood than the other. The thinnest part has a little more 3/4" of heartwood (19.05 MM), the rest has at least an inch (25.4 MM) on the thinner side and over an inch on the thicker side and I'd like a 50 lb bow out of it. What do you guys think? Your advice is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Aaron
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Looks like you have enough yew to do whatever you want there. I think of sinew being reserved for wider, shorter, recurved yew heartwood bows. Looking at the photos of your stave, I would make a nice narrow, deep longbow. Clean up the sapwood and back it with rawhide if the sapwood still looks suspect and you want a bow over 50#. Looks like a nice stave!
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Looks like you have enough yew to do whatever you want there. I think of sinew being reserved for wider, shorter, recurved yew heartwood bows. Looking at the photos of your stave, I would make a nice narrow, deep longbow. Clean up the sapwood and back it with rawhide if the sapwood still looks suspect and you want a bow over 50#. Looks like a nice stave!
What this guy said. 8)
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ya looks like a cool character longbow in there for sure
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+1 for Carson...
That sapwood thickness looks just about perfect. Don't touch it!
Where the bark is off ,it doesn't look too bad, I've had staves where a branch has rubbed the bark off but the sapwood was fine.
Looks fine to me.
Del
PS.
You can just scrape off the very outer loose bark, the inner layer will pop off during tillering. It saves a lot of work, also saves nicking the sapwood with tools.
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Thanks for the replies :)