This morning a friend of mine called and wanted to come over to check out a bow. It was Harry Angel, and he had an experimental bow made by David Knight. It was a 64" inch longbow designed to perform at 27" draw weight.
There were several things unique about the bow. #1 It was very lightweight in mass at less than 20 oz. I like lightweight bows...,if they shoot well. #2 It was very fast. #3 It groups arrows
very close to the spot that I shot at. and #4 It was very quiet with almost no hand shock.
When I first shot the bow it had one of our EFA quivers designed for primitive bows on it. That acounted for part of the quietness of the bow. However, without the quiver it was still quiet, even without silencers on the limbs. When we shot through the chronograph the results were surprising to me. This 42# @ 27" bow with 9 1/4 gr/lb arrows was shooting a whooping 178,179 and 179 ft per second, drawing and releasing at 27".
I had heard Harry talk about how fast these bows are, and I have been beaten by him with one of these bows more than I like to remember. I'm a little slow some times but I believe that I see something a little extradinary about these bows.
I believe that he's on to something. Whether it's a bamboo backed Ipe, or one that's backed with fiberglass (as this one was)all of his bows seem to shoot fast and accurate.
I heard of an article in Primitiver Archery magazine where David's bow was shooting over 200 feet per second. I don't know the details but that's smoking for anything made of wood and bamboo.