12 years old, damn Kirk that otta be a great stave for a self bow.
Bet it darkened up a good bit in color?
Start a new thread in the bowyers bench section if you decide to start working on it, we can help you along if you need any suggestions tillering it out.
Thanks Roy,
I have known a number of bowyers that were really into board bows, and self bows over the years and I’ve got the basics down. I’ve actually built a couple lighter weight self bows from yew staves years ago, and built my own draw knives and scrapers from old planer blades.
Time consuming tillering process scraping and sanding the belly and exercising the limbs…. But it was a good experience learning how to manipulate where the limbs bend, and the effects it had on how they performed.
The same theory applies to glass bows for balancing the limbs, only it’s achieved differently, or should I say “ it can be achieved” if the time is taken to actually tiller the bow. But that procedure starts with wedge configurations and taper rates to determine where the limb bends, as well as the shape of your form well before you lay up the limbs. Then mounting them on and adjustable riser to maximize your limb pad angle.
You are right Roy…. Anyone can lay up a glass bow and have it shoot arrows. But building a well balanced, smooth drawing bow that has decent performance requires years of experience. Starting with self bows is an excellent way to learn how these things really work and makes a true bowyer out of you.
Most glass bowyers come up with a limb shape they like, lay up the limbs, get the limbs aligned, get their width profile ground, and their tillering process is nothing more than sanding glass until the tiller measurements at the fades or riser are even, then call it good. Very few bowyers I know take the time to actually tiller a glass limb bow and balance the limbs properly and wonder how come some bows have more vibration than others do and don’t perform as well.
There are tillering tricks that can be used to fine tune glass limbs too if you don’t mind taking the extra time to do so……
Now you guys got me going on this self bow project. I’m going to have to pull out that Osage stave out and blow the dust off it….. Kirk