Hello there fellow Archers.
For the past five or so years, I've been fascinated with archery, and have been trying to build myself a takedown bow, but since I'm paid minimum wage and can't afford to buy one...plus I enjoy building things. I started off using the cheap flattened PVC pipe methods that are famous on Youtube, but due to me being a perfectionist and wanting my bow to have a certain aesthetic look to it as well as function, and the fickle nature of PVC, that method has not yet produced a functioning takedown bow that is to my liking. So over the last month or so, I've been researching bow building and I figured where better to ask for advice than from fellow archers.
My main concern is the limbs, as my risers hold up pretty well the way that I'm building them.
So for one, Laminated wood. I'm still new to bow building so please don't take my ignorance in the terminology used the wrong way. In my research, I've come across Tapered lams and Parallel lams, I know tapered lams have a .002 or .001 taper per inch, but are parallel lams just the straight cut wood with the same thickness throughout?
Youtube has the "how it's made" longbow video on it, and the narrator says that all the lams are tapered, what are the differences in a bow's performance when using all tapered lams as opposed to a mix of tapered and parallel lams?
As for the wood itself, I know that woods from hardware store's like Lowes and Home Depot aren't ideal because they are kiln died, would I get a better wood if I went to a lumber yard? And what about the wood selection? do all hardwoods perform the same, or do other's yield better results? I was hoping to either use Cherry or Hickory for my bow limbs.
As for cutting the wood. I've seen online that people cut the wood first, then grind in the taper with a drum sander. Is there a reason behind the cutting then sanding, or could I cut the lams with the taper in it and get the same result?
Lam thickness. The "How It's Made" video said that the 3 cherry lams were cut to under 1/4 inch and the bow drew 45# at 28", but another youtuber built a similar bow with 1/8 inch tapered lams and got around the same draw weight. I'd like to assume that the 1/8 inch taper is closer to the truth than the 1/4 inch...I guess I'd like to know which is closer to the truth, 1/4 or 1/8?
I guess when It's all summed up, I'd like to build 24-26 inch takedown bow limbs from either Hickory or cherry, with.05" fiberglass laminations, and what would be the best lamination combination of parallel or tapered limbs to reach a 45# at 28" draw weight, and maybe some advice for making a 25-30# at 28" draw so I can make one for my girlfriend somewhere down the road.
Thank you all for your time and advice.