Alright i knew most of that stuff about pine and i had already snapped a pine bow before i learned that lesson but i wanted to try this and see if it would last, and it almost did, only a inch shy of making it. So yeah going to stick away from soft woods from now on, lesson finally learned. Are you guys talking about specific gravity/density?
John: Very nice simile, i actually also have a garden and like to mess around in the kitchen as well.
razorback: I know right, i love this website everyone is so friendly and helpful nad smart compared to me. And no my school doens't have a woodshop.
Steve: thank you very mush, i have made on little 15# but am now shooting for a 30# and then will go up from there as i build the right/more muscles. it was tillering perfectly till the pine gave way, then it formed a hinge there that i couldn't get rid of and i then declared the bow "dead".
Pat: Sorry pat i think i used the wrong words before or something. It was a pine ceder bow that i was making and the pine was just in the center on the back, not typical but i needed to use up the wood and felt like trying something new. the hinge formed when the pine gave out. I hope that makes things clearer, i didn't really expect the bow to work but thought i'd give it a try anyway. It almost made it, i had been able to pull it to 26" but when i pulled it to 28" (my draw) then the pine crumpled and ended the bow.
I've got two 6' boards downstairs right now, one's maple and the other is (red?) oak, will those two work for making self longbows if i do them right?