That's a nice looking bow. Did you back it?
Thanks. It had quite a saga and it is likely a miracle it became a bow at all. There was a pin knot on the back that concerned me, so I initially backed it with cotton fabric and TBIII. The rest of the board was nice, straight grain and I wouldn't have backed it except for that knot.
Got it worked in some on the tree and then decided to heat treat the belly and put a touch of reflex into it. During heat treating I scorched the edges of the backing a bit in a couple spots. I didn't trust it after that, so I sanded it off (sanding all that off by hand was certainly penance for being a muppet with the heat gun...) and put a small patch of vectran fibres over the pin knot and left the rest of it unbacked. It was OK after that and I finished tillering it out to 28". First crisis averted...
Similar to Roy's recent BBO build along, a knot had appeared on the belly side of the lower limb when I was removing wood at the beginning. It was small and didn't transfer through to the back, so I soaked it with CA and carried on. After a few hundred shots that spot started hinging. So I rasped off some of the belly wood at the hinge and glued a patch over the knot area. I didn't pull it back perfectly flat when I glued the patch on and you can still see where the hinge was on the limb, but the patch has held for 1000+ shots now and nothing has moved, so it is hopefully going to stay that way.
I wanna come to your house and Sneak in and tear that weatherrest off.
Is that the tin siding? This is an old grainery that was converted to a shed somewhere long before we got to the place and I know nothing about it.
Mark