OK this is a Bingham's Takedown Pronounced 68inch Longbow im gonna be making at 35ish#
from googling I dont see many pics of there (Bingham's) risers "finished bows" wonder if many folks build them
But I see most folks Glue up there laminated wood pieces from front to back--alot of recurves pics
Im a thunkin of Glueing up Mine side to side with a maple center 1/2 inch thick then 2 slabs of Black Palm on iether side,
my thinking is the maple is the main strength core to the brittle Black palm outsides
1-Is this a wrong way to go about it? (I know glue-lam beams run the opposite way for strength) so maybe im all wet
2- Binghams drawings seem funky to me, and I can't find anywhere in the manual, how deep to cut the shelf,
do I cut to center?
when I glue up id like the Maple to show just a small amount hight wise (1/2 inch or so) at the shelf- so I need to figure out how deep im cutting the shelf and to offset the maple from center
The takedown Longbow grip,
whats the rule of thumb on adding wood thickness, for more curves? Im wanting to get away from the squarish form
in to a arched very round look including the top, bottom ends
Im thinking of adding to the front to arch up to the top of limb hight and maybe a 1/2 inch thicker in width
so it would be 2inches thick instead of bingham's 1 1/2 thick
Im probably moving towards a recurve riser than a longbow riser--Correct?
1-Is it the riser that makes it a longbow?
sorry for my questions,
Ive never been known to color inside the lines
Cheers
John