Im only fourteen and i would love to start building glass bows, ive build all wood bows, but with the cost of producing them and the high percentage of them that dont work,i want to have he durability of fiberglass. Because of my age, i dont have the funds to purchase lams, and the ususal fiberglass. I do however have the materials and means to make parallel lams of jatoba, black cherry, black walnut, hickory, and white oak.As well as very thin jatoba veneers. The only type of fiberglass that i can find is bondo fiberglass cloth with the resin and hardener. since it doesnt bond to wood, i was thinking that i could glue up the lams and the riser with tbII and the adding the cloth to the back. After all the glue would be done curing, i would tiller to my drawlentght, aiming at a lower weight, then adding jatoba veneers to the belly until i came to about 5 pounds of my draw weight, after gluing the veneers i would then add the fiberglass cloth to the belly as well.
I know that this is very unconventional, but i have unlimited wood to use, and this type of fiberglass isnt expensive. The only roblem i can think of this method having would be that the fiberglass isnt unidirectional, but i dont believe it would matter becaues i would only be using it as an extra "line of defense".
Any advice from anyone out there, again if i had the resources to do it the conventional way i would, but i just cant manage it.