So I made one board bow out of oak so far. I used a typical design, and I used the sander... so I made a bow that works, but instead of being around 40-45lbs I tillered it down to a 12 lb bow
So my daughter loves it and I learned a lot. I know what I did wrong and I have another one just like it that I am working on now although much slower and I understand a little more of what effects thinning the limbs has on the draw weight.
I also have a pyramid bow in the works that I am building from 4est Trakker's build a long which I found on here. This bow I am going much slower on and staying away from the power sander.
So in his plans the thickness of the bow should be right at 15/32 of an inch. So I cut it out on the bandsaw to get close and now I am trying to work it down to 15/32 of an inch.
I have a sureform rasp, a spoke shave and a bow scraper. The bow scraper's blade is slightly curved so I was concerned that I would not end up turning a straight piece of wood into something with curves and dips in it that will have to be sanded down severely at the end. I just recently got the spoke shave and really like that tool as I feel it gives me a straight even shave. But again I am new to this and don't really know what I am doing.
When I put the calipers on the limbs tonight, they were reading around .530". I worked on one limb for about 45 mins straight with the spoke shave. When I was done, I had it down to around .510" I need to get it down to .468. I'm just thinking that it took 45 mins to get that limb down a little bit - how much more time it will take to get them both down to that size will be several hours. That is fine if that is what I need to do, but I am wondering if I should be using a different tool to get it closer to the .468 mark faster, and then switch back to the spoke shave to get it down to size.
Just looking for some thoughts form you guys. I am going down the right path just continue on with the spoke shave or switch over to something else to take more wood off faster or what?
Thanks for the suggestions!