I take off the sapwood on BL and osage unless there isn't enough heartwood. I've been doing this bow making thing for a long time. Someone always has a "revolutionary" idea that challenges accepted practices. If I made bows for a living I'd sure try to convince myself sapwood is as strong as heartwood, too, considering the extra work involved in ring chasing. LOL. IMHO caveat emptor. I sure would not buy an osage bow with sapwood on it no matter the need to leave it on. Now want me to tell you what I really think? :)Jawge
Heck, I've sold 3 sapwood backed osage bows, and never had one complaint,
. George, I have boatloads of respect for you and your experience that dwarfs mine own and I sincerely mean that, so please don't take this the wrong way, but I have to disagree with your view on osage sapwood. I have made short heavier weight osage bows that have ended up chrysaling on the belly, which to me seems to takes a bit of work to do, and yet the sapwood has never failed on me.
I agree. I think the osage sap wood is like whitewoods and deteriorates quickly. I know two people who tried and proudly proclaimed it was possible to use the sap wood. Both broke about a month later... I can't vouch for how it was treated though.
White woods like hickory, hophornbeam, elm, etc? There's plenty of white woods that are excellent bow woods, and I don't think anyone finds the term word "white wood" a dirty wood. I will say that it will check very soon if you don't seal it as soon as you take the bark off. Larger staves as well as staves with knots are more likely to check as well. I split my osage almost always on the knots if I can, and split the staves out so that they are small enough not to check, but still have enough meat on them not to warp. I also slowly dry my staves inside my house. And if a stave is small enough and clean enough, sometimes I won't even seal the back, as it will most likely not check. But this is of course the exception, and usually pretty narrow staves, or scrap staves. I guess seasoning osage staves with the bark off and the sapwood on is not the easiest thing to do. But once the staves are seasoned, the sapwood has always worked for me when used as the back of a bow. Just throwing all that out there,
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