I have posted the measurements of the HLD Elder bow on the other thread!
For comparison here are some other elders of mine:
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,35631.0.html?PHPSESSID=ojscmbeir9rl5rm6ccho63ej64http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,37923.0.htmlhttp://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,38689.0.htmlhttp://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,38720.0.htmlFirst sketch is the bow unbraced with depth d1 and width w1 and groove g1
Second sketch shows the bow drawn with d2, w2, g2
What did happen?
d1>d2: you get a bow with a thinner limb, only a few millimeters make a great affair!
w1<w2: you get a bow with a wider flatter limb, the increase isn the last inches is lower than 'normal'.
g1>g2: you get a belly surface with compression force vertically (same as on every 'normal' bow) and additional tension force horizontally. Perhaps this effects preventing chrysals and lower stress. The wood cells have more room caused from zhe tension force for the vertically compression.
My thoughts for designing HLD:
- the walls must be thin enough to flatten out a bit when bow gets drawn
- the groove must be pronounced enough to get an decreasing limb thickness
- the Cross section should show a horizontally taper to prevent splitting. that means the wall is thickest in the middle and tapers out to the ridges
- there should be a vertically taper (of course!) to get the bow even bending. But this also must prevent the sudden 'snap-effect' as can be seen on metal ruler tapes
- the bow must be tillered in the right proportions to get all that things working. But when done alright, you have a bow with high early drawweight, lower increase in the last inches ( of course no 'let-off'), the graph of the fd - curve is in the first inches steeper (more energy is stored) and there will be less stress on the belly - always compared to a 'normal' bow.