G'day all,
I've recently noticed an alternative way of laying out the glass, lams and riser for D/R longbows.
Instead of the belly glass and laminations of each limb riding up their respective riser ramps to a stop at the handgrip section, certain bowyers (some Tolke models from Montana Bows are notable examples) feature a riser that is noticably flatter along it's belly contour.
The result is that the belly laminations and glass run along the less ramp-y belly contour in one uninterupted piece, from limbtip to limbtip. Separate timber and/or micarta sections are also glued to the outside of the belly glass to allow for the shaping of a locator-style grip.
My question to you guys is - has anyone built their risers in this way? how do you find it?
To my enthusiastic but relatively inexperienced eye, all I see is upside - far gentler fades that should be easier to clamp for glueing, one-piece belly lams and glass - fewer parts to fiddle with and keep in place for glueing. It seems that the glass running uninterrupted thru the riser is bolstering the strength of the riser too.....
Commonsense suggests to me that there must also be potential pitfalls - I guess the glueing of the supplementary riser parts to the belly glass is extra work....but that's enough out of me - please guys I'd appreciate any input and experiences you could inform me with!!
Thanks,
Darren