Got myself a few pieces of yew which I've been working on slowly.
Had a set of billets which I took belly splits from, before splicing into staves. So i had two staves, one heartwood and one sapwood/heart mix. Also took an even smaller belly split from each heartwood piece, so I had two stages for miniatures as well.
I started with the miniatures, first was 16" or so long drawing a few pounds, chased a ring on the back, and all was well until one day ... Kerpow!!! It just detonated at full (7-8") draw.
Anyway, yesterday I was finished up a nice heartwood self bow from the same billets as mentioned above, and I bring the bow to full draw, for maybe the tenth time, and ... Bang!!!! Wood flying all over the place. The back wasn't perfect, but it actually broke in a very clean well chased portion of the back of the lower limb. The bow was 56"ttt drawing 40#@25" and was maybe 1.25-1.375" wide. Not what I would call highly stressed at all. Very short stiff handle. Tiller was very clean, perhaps not perfect but I couldn't see any errors in it. It had taken almost zero set ... I mean maybe half an inch or 3/4" so I thoight things were coming along well.
Any thoughts here on what I'm doing wrong? The wood just seems so brittle .... Is this typical of Yew or is is the particular billet set? Any advice is appreciated.
I still have the sap/heart spliced stave to work on, but I'm not risking it .... That one gets a good backing of sinew.
P.S. Both failures were clearly tension failures.