I can't believe how time flys. I went from being a bow making machine t not making any bows at all. Just suddenly stopped. I still pull some of the old bows out of the garage and rework them here and there. I think I just ran out of things to try. I think mentaly I am gearing up for my next project I plan to start next year. I won't go into detail but it will be a giant flight bow, maybe 50 ft long. This is my retirement project, plan to have about a 20ft draw and rig it to shoot 12 ft long poles. This year I plan to go down south and find the hickory trees I will need, figure I will build it in the desert somewhere very dry. Hoping for a 1/2 mile long shot. Steve
I'm not the only one then, Steve. I manage maybe 2 bows a year, maybe. I marvel sometimes at the guys who churn out bow after bow, but each person is motivated by whatever motivates them, and while I wish I could be more productive and prolific, I need balance in my life that includes a lot of other things. Burning out on something tells me I need to walk away for a while.
One thing I noticed about myself is that I need a bow design that speaks to me very strongly. I'd be a much better bow maker if I kept busy making bows, perfecting techniques, eliminating things like excessive set, improving heat treating, etc, but the desire has to be there. Right now, I've manged to begin tillering a Sarnate bow over the past few days, a neolithic bow design I found on Paleoplanet. The other bows that are partially done I will get to one day, or not, but they don't touch that nerve I need to be interested in them.
The 50 foot bow sounds dangerous, so take care. I have this 4 hour tape of a Korean bowyer, and I understand that his attempt at building a giant court bow of some kind contributed to his death, but I am not sure of the details. It sounds more like a catapult then a bow you are thinking of making. The Greeks did built huge tension machines featuring a bow, but after a certain size, torsion springs were developed to realize greater and greater power for stone and arrow shooting machines, so there may be a limit to how big a bow can get. Some of the Da Vinci designs were enormous, but they were theoretical, and probably never built.
You may want to look into the pumkin' chuckers.
http://www.punkinchunkin.com/ The big goal with them is to build a machine to fling a pumpkin 1 mile. It is an amazing culture of people, and some of the machines are based on bows, while others are something like trebochets, catapults, and other types of machines. I can introduce you to some of the folks, including Team Tormenta, a group based here in MA. I have a buddy who is invovled with them on some research projects. I'm sure they would recognize you from that TV show you appeared on, the Da Vinci show.
Probably you are busy with other projects, though. If you are creative, you will find outlets. I'm building a NW Trade Gun, making furniture, messing with slings, making atlatls, and developing historic shoots for my club. For this coming April I'm developing a historic timeline shoot, and am inviting ancient and medieval through WWII reenactors and living history people. Combined with a ISAC atlatls event and perhaps at least a few catapults, some top Native American living history guys and some early colonial living history guys, and a few small artillary pieces and crews, it ought to be a lot of fun. Almost all of it springs though from the skills I have developed with archery, so even if I dont pick up a draw knife for a while, the benefits of primtive bows keeps my life interesting.
Dane