Ive been wanting to build a bow for a long time, and I have finally got around to really researching it, seeing what woods work, etc. Im going to make a laminate recurve. I figure ill make my own lams, but I need to see if I can get my jig made that precise first. Its definitely cheaper.I know there is a lot of top notch bowyers on this site because I have seen some of the work and information that has been given, so I am excited to see if this will work or not. Im not crazy about the carbon, but Ill take help where I can get it. It may not be worth it though, as I will probably pull around 60+ lbs on a recurve. I did some shooting with a 55 lb longbow and it seems way way to light. My compound is at 75 lbs with a very steep draw cycle to get its speed. I shoot around 28.5 to 29 inches.
So, after lots of research, I came up with this combination from back to belly: Glass, hickory veneer, carbon, osage, blacklocust, osage, glass.
1) 45 degree glass for minimizing torsion and to serve as backing.
2) Hickory veneer for looks.
3) Carbon for speed, but I haven't quite figured out if its even worth using. I might as well ask though.
4) Osage for its elasticity, compression, etc. I wanted this next to the carbon for compatibility purposes.
5) Black locust as a core.
6) Osage again.
7) Then a fiberglass belly. Possibly at 90 degrees this time.
Just to give you an idea of what I have access to incase I need to subsitute or throw the entire idea away: I live on 1000 acres of farmland with several hundred acres of woods between what we own and what I have access to from neighbors. Basically any wood found in North Missouri I can find around here. I currently can go into the back part of this tract and find black locust, hickory, black walnut, osage orange, elm, several types of oak including water oak and white oak, and maple (not sure which kinds, I know we have some soft maple around, but I cant distinguish hard maple. There is more woods in the river bottom like birch and willow.
I dont know what to look for, but I know we have buckeye, ash, eastern and american hornbeam, red oak, and some cherry.