Mark, your cherry picking.
Would you not like to address my assumption that if we were exceeding the elastic limit of the epoxy in the composite, that we would be seeing signs of plastic deformation?
This is the bow you are referring to?
“Thanks. It had quite a saga and it is likely a miracle it became a bow at all. There was a pin knot on the back that concerned me, so I initially backed it with cotton fabric and TBIII. The rest of the board was nice, straight grain and I wouldn't have backed it except for that knot.
Got it worked in some on the tree and then decided to heat treat the belly and put a touch of reflex into it. During heat treating I scorched the edges of the backing a bit in a couple spots. I didn't trust it after that, so I sanded it off (sanding all that off by hand was certainly penance for being a muppet with the heat gun...) and put a small patch of vectran fibres over the pin knot and left the rest of it unbacked. It was OK after that and I finished tillering it out to 28". First crisis averted...
Similar to Roy's recent BBO build along, a knot had appeared on the belly side of the lower limb when I was removing wood at the beginning. It was small and didn't transfer through to the back, so I soaked it with CA and carried on. After a few hundred shots that spot started hinging. So I rasped off some of the belly wood at the hinge and glued a patch over the knot area. I didn't pull it back perfectly flat when I glued the patch on and you can still see where the hinge was on the limb, but the patch has held for 1000+ shots now and nothing has moved, so it is hopefully going to stay that way.”
How is it possible to account for all that modification?
Do you have an example other than your Maple bow, one with fiberglass that you have done the same design and testing procedures?
I would be interested to know if anyone has designed and calculated the properties of a hypothetical bow, built the bow and then checked the accuracy against test data of same bow in a laboratory?
Yes, every bow I build.
You might be able to get a workable bow with your micro-balloon belly strip. After all, you can make a bow out of concrete with the right dimensions. It may not be much fun to shoot or carry around, but it can be done. The elastic modulus of the no-glass-fiber material you described will be very low, kind of like putting a piece of taffy on the bow belly. Probably a best-case result will give you something like a piece of PVC for the belly lam of your bow (best case). It will require much more than typical stack thickness to achieve draw weight.
Good luck. Make your material, use it on a bow, and let us know how it goes.
Alan
Sound like you have access to a lab?
And thanks, I think I will just to spite you guy's