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Author Topic: Hole repair question  (Read 308 times)

Offline johnnyc

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Hole repair question
« on: February 02, 2010, 02:40:00 PM »
Found a particular bow I like identical to one I currently own and its at a heavier poundage than mine. Wanting to buy this one to hunt with since it's the exact weight I'm wanting. The only flaw is someone drilled a hole completely through the risor for a site pin    "[dntthnk]"  
  Anyway, after reading bowdoc's restoration 101, it doesn't really concern me    :)  
This one would make a nice one to hunt with and not worry about beating up.
  So to repair this hole without really worrying about it looking 100 % cosmetically, just concerned with strength, what would be better?
Just filling with loctite or would you try to glue some wood in there?
Thanks

Offline NumPls

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Re: Hole repair question
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2010, 02:56:00 PM »
Johnny -

I can tell you the approach that I would take, and, when BowDoc chimes in, he can tell you the approach that you probably SHOULD take.

If I planned to hunt with the bow, instead of trying to show it off, I would not mess with trying to get a plug that matched the grain of the riser. Instead, I would take a more expedient approach.

I would find a piece of wood that was ~1/8" (or so) shorter than the depth of the hole and that fit the hole snugly. This piece of wood could me a piece of a dowel or something whittled to size. I would glue this piece of wood in the hole leaving ~1/16" of space on the ends. I might use superglue or I might use 5-minute epoxy, whatever seemed best based on how snugly the piece of wood fit the hole (epoxy would fill gaps better). After the plug was securely in place, I would mix up epoxy to fill the last 1/16" on each side. I have mixed sawdust and (Testor's Model) paint with epoxy whichever matched the color of the wood better. The epoxy + sawdust made for a coarser surface, so I would plan to sand it down after it had set. BowDoc has said that he sometimes uses powdered artist paint pigments to color epoxy and superglue, both. After the final fill is fully set, I would sand to create a better surface and put on a little finish to seal the deal.

Okay, now BowDoc can chime in and tell you what you should really do.

Ray

Offline mwmwmb

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Re: Hole repair question
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2010, 06:39:00 PM »
I think Bowdoc did a "how-to" on hole filling.

Offline d. ward

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Re: Hole repair question
« Reply #3 on: February 04, 2010, 07:58:00 AM »
Ray nailed it but how about a pic of the hole ? I also have 6 holes in two bows to fill at some point and would be happy to take some pics but it will be like maybe a day or two before I'll be able to do pics and post them ?? bd

Offline johnnyc

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Re: Hole repair question
« Reply #4 on: February 04, 2010, 01:34:00 PM »
Thanks, sounds good Bowdoc!

Offline NumPls

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Re: Hole repair question
« Reply #5 on: February 04, 2010, 03:42:00 PM »
Yes, BowDoc, a pictorial tutorial would be great!

Ray

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