Hi guys,
I have been building a lot of tri-lam longbows lately. When I read up on them, the prevailing wisdom is to use a light weight, porous wood as the core.
However... I have used mostly the opposite of that. I like the color variation that the tropical woods give me. So my cores have been bloodwood, purpleheart, chakte viga, osage, ipe, and ziracote. I have also used chestnut, cherry, and black walnut... But mostly the hard, dense, tropical woods.
So what gives? I now know you "can" use dense woods. But I see no measurable difference between the performance of one with dense woods from one with lighter woods.
I have dug through the internet, old posts, books and so on... But I cannot lock down a definitive answer on this.
The only thing I have really seemed to discover is more lams seems to equal a smooth draw and a pleasant shooting bow.
Any of ya'll have some wisdom to share?
Jim