Author Topic: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?  (Read 10249 times)

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Offline Diligence

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Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« on: January 30, 2010, 12:31:27 am »
Okay gang - been lurking for a long time.  I've been shooting my first bow, and it has developed a problem.  I need your help.

The specs:
-60" Nock to Nock
-self bow of choke-cherry
-bend thru the handle
- 45# at 26" and 53# at 28" (tillered to 28")
-approx 1.25" wide at handle by 0.75" thick
-even taper (but thicker at the knots) to 7/8" wide by 1/2" thick at the nocks (approximately)
- this bow has seen maybe 200 shots, tops.
- it has about 3" of set (resulting from me tillering it when it was still a bit green)
- no belly tempering, no backing, no ring chasing (just removed the bark)
edit to add....this bow has a natural, but slight recurve at the tips...

It's developed some belly chryssals/frets in one section of the top limb and it has also developed a compression fracture adjacent to a knot (in the same location as the chryssals).  I know that I was starting to get a bit of a hinge in this area during tillering, but thought I had gotten it out.  Poor tillering caused this I think.

Here are the photos:
-full draw (the spot of concern has a bit of black tape on it)
-the pencil is pointing to the fracture and the area with surface chryssals is only the length of the pencil
-several close-ups showing the details (note that just above the fracture is a couple of tool marks, they look like dents)

My question:

Do you all, in your combined wisdom, think that this particular compression fracture should be fixed?

If it should be fixed and not ignored (with prayer for the best), should I use Dean Torges' method?  (ie. cut out a sectiopn & glue in a patch)  Or, would the rawhide patch method (per Gordon's bow build-a-long) be a better option.

I really, really want this bow to last and not blow up while shooting on the line in my new archery club.  Mr. Murphy definately showed up last night.  My first time at a club, full of ONLY compound shooters, and my bow starts to break.....wonderful.

What do you think?

Jaye in Calgary


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« Last Edit: January 30, 2010, 01:08:51 am by Diligence »
"Always do your best and to everyone be kind and good" - Ernst Hjalmer Selin (1906-2000)....my grandfather's words of advice he wanted me to tell my children.

Offline El Destructo

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #1 on: January 30, 2010, 12:56:14 am »
Now remember ...you asked....... 8)......Now I think that Choke Cherry is a poor wood to begin with...It has a tendency to fret no matter what you do....if the Tiller isn't Spot On...It will tell on You...and it did...Here is what I see...and I say this knowing I may be wrong...but this is my Opinion....The Top Limbs Tiller is way out...making the Spot with the Knot work way too much...and it could not take the Pressures of doing all the Work... :P...So it fretted...and Fractured on You...Now for the Fix...I would soak the Knot with Super Glue...and retiller that Top Limb to get the Outer Part of the Limb working like the Bottom one is...I would either Wrap the Chrysalled Area with Sinew and Hide Glue...or a Rawhide wrap to slow down the deterioration of this Spot...nothing will save it forever...JMO

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Offline rileyconcrete

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #2 on: January 30, 2010, 01:10:13 am »
I am gonna agree with EL D.  He has helped me alot and by his photo it shows you need to adjust the tiller on the top limb.  Now about the chokecherry,  I worked a piece today.  I cut some a few months ago and  split a month ago, I was trying a small kids bow just to see how the wood behaves and it seems very soft unlike any other wood I have worked.  So I think it would fret  very easy.  Plus the sapwood is supposedly weak in compression and it looks as if that is what your bow consists of. 
I would wrap the freted, knots with sinew and hide glue, and retiller and see what happens.

Tell
Tell Riley

Offline Del the cat

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #3 on: January 30, 2010, 06:18:07 am »
I think it's going to go bang eventually...
In the pic where you have the pencil, you can see the grain bending out to the left, you havn't allowed the grain to go out and around the knot (E.G The left edge of the bow should bulge out wider where the knot is) and that's been a contributory factor.
The other crysals you could brobably live with, but the crack to theft of the knot looks like an accident waiting to happen.
Just my opinion of course...
To improve it, do like the other guys say, but also take wood off the lower limb, to allow this to flex more and take some load off the upper.
If it's any consolation, I just made a little experimental bow backed with rawhide which is chrysalling a tad...mind it is my 'one hour bow'.
You can always have it as a 'lookin at' bow rather than a 'shootin' bow ;)
Del
« Last Edit: January 30, 2010, 06:22:59 am by Del the cat »
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Offline DanaM

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #4 on: January 30, 2010, 09:55:12 am »
Me I would either shoot it till it fails or hang it on the wall, then make another.
I think the biggest problem is 1 1/4" is just to narrow for a 60" cherry bow especially at 28" draw.
Your tiller may not be perfect but its not that bad either so I believe the answer is wider and longer.
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half eye

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #5 on: January 30, 2010, 11:27:39 am »
I'm kinda leaning toward what dana said....I've had a couple of bows get away from me too ;D But I did get a "fix" in that helped enough that neither one has "gone away" yet.  You could try to tillerr in a little more bend on both sides of the problem area....and then even out the bow's tiller by working down the lower limb profile to match the upper.....you might loose 5 to 8 lbs but it saved my two "problem childern.

I know a lot of the fellas also add super glue to the problem areas (probably couldn't hurt) but I start all my bow finishes with 6 coats of "watered-down" lacquer (50 / 50 reduction with acetone) it soaks in real good and helps stabilize the wood cells (I think) hope you try to save it....even if it has to be a little "less stout".
half eye ;)

Offline George Tsoukalas

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #6 on: January 30, 2010, 11:50:06 am »
The design is a problem. It is under built, apparently as I never used it, for the wood. The one glaring thing is the knot. Knt's are weak spots and therefore, should appear stiff in relation to the rest of the limb. That knot is bending too much. Jawge
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Offline Little John

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #7 on: January 30, 2010, 12:54:56 pm »
I would get started on a new bow. You can shoot it in the meantime but I might not take it to the club shoot if you don't want to be embaresed in front of the compounders. Get you a good clean piece of seasoned osage and you will have a much better shot at a durable long lasting bow.    Kenneth
May all of your moments afield with bow in hand please and satisfy you.            G. Fred Asbell

Offline Diligence

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #8 on: January 30, 2010, 02:54:56 pm »
Good information from everybody so far.

As for starting a new bow, well, I've got several staves with bow outlines drawn on them, just have to get into the shop to finish them.  I'll go longer and wider with the next one for sure.  At the knots, I will be extra generous in width and thickness.  For the record, this bow has 11 knots in it, but this knot is the only place where the back of the bow isn't raised at a knot....live and learn I guess.

However, I am curious about a repair technique.

I can re-tiller the two limbs to drop some weight and hopefully lower the stress on this spot, but is this type of a failure a good candidate for a patch job (i.e. grind out and replace a piece)?

Anyone care to offer some more repair advice?
"Always do your best and to everyone be kind and good" - Ernst Hjalmer Selin (1906-2000)....my grandfather's words of advice he wanted me to tell my children.

Offline Ryano

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #9 on: January 30, 2010, 03:39:52 pm »
If you have more wood just build another bow. Don't waste your time trying to patch up that one when you could be using it to build another one. jmo....
Its November, I'm gone hunt'in.......
Osage is still better.....

Offline adb

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #10 on: January 30, 2010, 04:10:46 pm »
If that bow was mine, I'd set it in the corner and make another. You could spend as much time trying to fix it, as you would making another, with no guarantees it would even work out. You made some mistakes... learn from it and move on. I have quite a big bin of mistakes in the corner of my shop, and every once in a while when I look over there, I remember the lessons.

Offline cracker

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #11 on: January 30, 2010, 04:50:28 pm »
I REALLY REALLY hate to say this but I agree with Dana.
If we can't help each other what is the point of being here?

Offline DanaM

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #12 on: January 30, 2010, 08:11:30 pm »
I REALLY REALLY hate to say this but I agree with Dana.

Bout time ya saw it my way ya big ol cracker :D
"Prosperity is a way of living and thinking, and not just money or things. Poverty is a way of living and thinking, and not just a lack of money or things."

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Offline JW_Halverson

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #13 on: January 30, 2010, 09:28:08 pm »
I've been shooting my first bow, and it has developed a problem. 

That's all I needed to know to come up with my answer to you.  You only get one First Bow.  What you have ain't bad, lots of our firsts never even made it to the tillering stage, much less thrown so much as a single arrow.  Time to put her up on the wall with a little love and respect. 

Don't give up on chokecherry, just go a little wider, leave all knots unbending, and make sure you fully respect the grain of the wood.  Post pics of your next bow, too!
Guns have triggers. Bicycles have wheels. Trees and bows have wooden limbs.

Offline mullet

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Re: Bow Surgery or Scrap Heap?
« Reply #14 on: January 30, 2010, 09:55:23 pm »
 I have to agree with RyanO, and Mr. Cat, an accident ready to happen.
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