Hi All.
Here is my latest bow. Got the final finish on this weekend and had her out this morning. 35# at 26 inches. 64" NTN R/D design. I got the plans off Bingham. I add two layers of glass in the riser so I could cut the window to center. For the rest and strike plate, I used the soft side of self adhesive velcro. I'm real happy with the way the maple riser finished.
It shoots well. The center cut riser lets it shot lots of different arrows. the best so far are GT 1535s, 29 inches long with 155grn up front (100grn inserts and 55 grn tips). But it seems to be just as happy with 200 grns up front. I also shot a 3555 with 145 up front and all seemed fine. As for speed, haven't gotten to the chrono yet, but I can get out to 25 yards with no problem.
Here are the pics.
Lessons learned:
-If you are going to take the time to make a bow, use the best materials you can find. The hours and attention required deserve quality and beautiful materials.
-Be Patient
-Try new things. This was the first time I used the handle overlays (the additional layers on back of the bow by the riser and the additional wood on the belly, below and above the handle)
Skills to improve:
-sanding tips and handle overlays into glass.
-applying a smooth finish, no lint, bubbles or streaks
-less mess during glue-up and clamping. One thing I did do this time that helped was change to fresh gloves to do the actual clamping. So one pair for the gluing, and a new pair for dealing with the clamps
Thank you to everyone on this board for the support, education and inspiration.
Gentleman Archer