Greetings everyone. I am a new member and already want to thank you for what I've learned here.
This red oak board bow is my third real attempt but the first to put any knowledge to work. It's from the only suitably-grained 1"x2"x6' the nearest Lowe's had but I got lucky and also found an 8'er which I will cut down for my next bow.
I want a target bow with some zip at around 30 yards so I suppose 40# @ 30" is about right. I draw 29" so the 30" figure is my idea of insurance.
Now that I've got my photos in place I have a description and a couple of questions for you all.
It's 70 1/4" long with a 5" riser which is 1 3/8" thick by 1 3/16" wide. After 1" the limbs are 5/8" thick; after 13 1/2" they're 9/16" thick, and the last 19-20" they're 3/8" thick.
The limbs are 1 1/2" wide from the fades out 16" where they taper to 3/4" at the nocks.
In the tillering photo I'm using a long string which is tight but doesn't require any bending to brace. This string is trot line material and a bit stretchy but I'll be getting a real bowstring and tillering string based on the advice you give... otherwise I'll get a Flemish twist with a loop on one end only. In the photo it's in the 20" notch on my stick.
My cheap fishing scale says I'm pulling 17# @ 18".
Finally, there's 1/2 - 1" of set in the unstrung bow.
I've not shaped the handle so the bow doesn't fall off the stick but I have a Ray Iles mortising chisel I'll copy for an oval grip which should align the bow, my arm, and the target.
My tillering so far has consisted of removing squiggly pencil marks with my #49 Nicholson rasp then exercising the bow on the stick and repeatedly shooting an arrow. I've maintained a rectangular cross-section and pretty uniform taper, working the belly, not the sides. I smooth it a little with a coarse file then re-roundover the edges with sandpaper.
I don't know what I'm doing regarding the draw weight. It gets hard enough to pull my scale down past 18" that I won't even try to see if it goes higher than that 17#.
I also need feedback RE bracing the bugger. Oh, I'm getting a stringer as well.
Have I messed up by shooting it before it's even braced?
Given the thicknesses/widths above can I keep tillering and get a bow with some zip at 30 yards?
Thanks in advance and I look forward to reading what y'all have to say about this and all the other stuff here on the Bowyer's Bench.