I want to start my first post on this website by saying that Trad Gang is a great (cyber)-envronment. Full of friendly, knowledgeable people who are willing to share their experience and know how at the drop of a hat. That is truly a breath of fresh air in our world. In keeping with that spirit, I promise that as I get better at this bow building thing I will share what I have learned with the same freedom and good will that I have seen from all of you.
In the meantime...SOMEBODY PLEASE HELP ME BEFORE I KILL ANOTHER INNOCENT BOW!!!
This is my latest attempt at a red oak flatbow. It's based on the Popular Mechanics design from the 50's, but the board was checked on one end so I made it 4" shorter. And I wanted it to be more powerful, so I made the limbs 1/4" wider. (You probably see where this is going.) The growth rings were perfect, but there was some grain runoff along the sides. So I decided to back it, and I think that's where all my problems started. I used ipe. I figured why not since I have a garage full of the stuff leftover from decks I have built. So I picked the tightest grained quarter sawn piece I could find and ripped it down to 3/16" on my table saw. If you, right now, are thinking,"Dude, that is way too thick!", you would be absolutely right. I actually thought the same thing when I saw them; but damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!
This brings us to the glue up phase of my project. The only piece of ipe with a suitable grain that I could find was too short to cover the bow in one piece, so I did it in two pieces, spliced in the center. More on that nightmare later. I noticed, after floor tiller, that the oak was already taking some set, so I laid two 2X4's flat under each tip, applied a liberal amount of TBIII, and clamped the riser to my workbench, and put that ipe to work! A whole bunch of clamps and leave it for 24 hours.
The next evening, after pulling the clamps and trimming the backing the next evening