Hi! I am a long time lurker of tradgang, and have built three bows previously, but the last bow I built was 7 years ago. I am finally getting back to building and starting off by making two bows at the same time, one for me to shoot and one for a co-worker. I have been taking pictures as I go with the thought that I might do a build along, and now that I am stuck and needing advice I figured I would take the plunge!
The bows are bamboo backed Ipe, one with zebra and bloodwood riser and power lam, the other is the same except it will have maple and bloodwood riser and power lam.
I found the Ipe at a local woodworking shop called called CU woodshop, and they agreed to cut two slats from a nice piece that I found for $20 each. The bamboo was from echo archery, the zebra wood block was from Big Jim's bow company and the bloodwood was from Bell Forest Products. The hard maple was part of a left over box at a local hardwood flooring store, and they gave me it for free. (If sourcing my materials is in violation of the board's promotion policies, please let me know and I will edit it out)
The first step I did was use a friend's table saw to get all my materials as close as possible to the needed size.
I then made a template from posterboard based on dimensions found in Sam Harper's boo backed ipe build along at poorfolkbows.com
I then took my hand held belt sander and taped the trigger down and attached it to a sawhorse to remove wood and make an even taper.
(my humble work bench)
I followed the same process to taper the sides the same way as the belly side of the ipe. I came to the conclusion I would need to taper both before my glue up because I am shooting for an aggressive reflex-deflex profile.
When I was satisfied with my ipe pieces, I clamped them to the pre-flattened bamboo pieces. Then I marked around the edges and went back to the belt sander.
If you look closely, you can see that I labeled each limb and the corresponding side of the bamboo.
Now, onto the powerlam! I have always been intimidated by powerlams, mostly because the precision required.. and you all saw my "shop" set up :rolleyes:
After grinding the zebrawood and bloodwood seperately, I glued and clamped them together.
When glue up was complete, I took them back to the belt sander to ensure that the taper matched on both parts of the lam. With that done (and some prep work to the other riser pieces) I got to this point.