In the currant issue of Traditional Bow Hunter there is an article about a longbow built along the guidelines of a bow in "Building Your First Fiberglass Longbow" In the Oct/Nov 2005 Traditional Bow Hunter.
The original bow in question is a straight back longbow. Jason Jelinek uses 0.050 fiberglass for front and back, a 0.25 in core, and a 16 inch riser to build the 66 inch (65" nock to nock) longbow. The resulting draw weight is about 45 lbs, which is what I am wanting. The bow core is not tapered and he gets the tiler by cutting the bow in a pyramid style, leaving the middle 28 inches full width and tapering the outer limbs down to 3/8". This results in a circular tiller?
It seems that his process is pretty simple. My question is, will this method result in a decent smooth shooting bow? He also using G2 epoxy cured for several days at room temperature instead of a hot box.
Any suggestions to improve this, other than using multiple laminations for the core? For that matter where can you buy 0.25 laminations? The thickest I see is 0.09 inches.