3Rivers Archery



The Trad Gang Digital Market













Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters






LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS


Author Topic: Materials verse design  (Read 664 times)

Offline Jason Kendall

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 1210
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #20 on: January 01, 2009, 06:37:00 PM »
I agree with OL on this one, my friend Chad at Lost Creek Bows has been trying the foam and they are smooth but no different than his bows with other cores. Through the chrono his black glass and maple was the same as the 'foam' stuff. I think its mostly design too.

Offline myshootinstinks

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 616
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #21 on: January 01, 2009, 08:58:00 PM »
OL & Jason,
    That is my experience as well, from a shooters standpoint. I have been shooting bows w/ maple, bamboo, and foam.  The foam definately has a nicer "feel" to it in the draw,(in this recurve, can't compare apples for apples 'cause I don't have an identical recurve w/ boo or maple core).  Faster? Not really.  All are very close within the weight range.

Offline Jedimaster

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 946
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #22 on: January 01, 2009, 09:14:00 PM »
I've had a couple of foam core bows and I thought they were plenty smooth, quiet and lastly fast.  Well, I just reckoned they ought to be - they were quite a bit more expensive than similar bows with more familiar limb cores.  

What I'm saying is that I expected that performance because I paid for the bowyer's expertise, research and development to produce a very efficient and smooth limb ... and I got what I paid for.  It really made a statement when my little Orion recurve shot as well (tonkin boo) at quite a significant price difference.  Both were well designed but one employed a more modern technology and that was reflected in price.  I can at least preliminarily conclude that it is design over material that wins - as long as the materials selected are of good quality.
Do or do not ... there is no "try"

Cum catapulatae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt.

Offline mooseman76

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 1114
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #23 on: January 01, 2009, 09:28:00 PM »
Will the consistency of foam ensure that each bow the bowyer builds performs the same?  I've had multiple bows of the same model from the same bowyer and some were faster, louder, stiffer, etc...  I assume this is due to the fact that they had natural cores and they may differ as OL said earlier.  So a bow made cut on a cnc machine with foam cores should be the ultimate in repeatability with each bow feeling and shooting exactly the same?  

Mike

Offline amar911

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 2860
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #24 on: January 02, 2009, 01:37:00 AM »
O.L., I stand corrected on the weight of the foam. I know that syntactic foam is actually lots of tiny hollow glass spheres in a hard synthetic resin, not foam as we usually think of that term, but I did believe it was as light as actionboo, which is pretty light itself.

Allan
TGMM Family of the Bow

Offline O.L. Adcock

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 823
Re: Materials verse design
« Reply #25 on: January 02, 2009, 10:45:00 AM »
Allan, I'm sure there are many desities available so some of it might be. The pieces we got our hands was supposedly the same stuff Hoyt uses and it was 20-30% densier then Actionboo but a few grains per cu/in doesn't make a lot of difference especially in bows that don't have a lot of core to start with. It would be consistant, at least in the same lot, inexpensive, and easy to machine so I can see the popularity.....O.L.
---Six NAA/FITA National and World flight records.----

Users currently browsing this topic:

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
 

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2024 ~ Trad Gang.com ©