Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: Tiredtim on August 27, 2017, 01:29:08 pm
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Good day to all. I have a question. I haven't built a bow in a while and I'm using the same stave that I made my hunting bow with about 3 years ago. The bow is for my son. I want your advice about the worm holes and knots. Do you thing the bow will break at the worm holes? At the knot?
I'm attaching pictures to show where they are. I'm obviously not close to being finished but do you think I'm wasting my time on this stave? Any suggestions would be appreciated.
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That doesn't look very promising. Can you chase a clean ring below the worm damage? Where is that knot located in the bow? If it's in the working portion of the limb I wouldn't trust it. If that stave was in my work shop it would be used for fire wood.
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^^^^
Yep, what he said. If ya got a better stave use it.
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Thanks guys. Kind of what I was thinking.
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Yeah, cook wood. ;)
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I would hesitate to use it for a hunting bow. But for a youth bow of about 30 pounds, I would just plane the holes out.
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No good... don't waste your time.
I had some Pacific Yew billets sent over had bug damage in the sapwood (the bugs hadn't read the book that says they don't eat Yew 'cos it's toxic ;D )
I picked out 2 that looked clean... got a bow built and drawing about 26" when it exploded... bug hole straight across the back just below the surface, and that's where it blew...
I never did figure out how the hole got there as I couldn't find the entry of exit point... devious little bugs >:(
Del
PS. I took the sapwood off the other billets and backed 'em with some English Yew sapwood making a Transatlantic bow :)