Recently I made a change to carbon arrows. Mostly because I like to shoot a relativly hevy bow....70lbs, and I have a long draw...31"
After bare shaft tunning was completed, I decided to make a new flemish string for my bow during the arrow building process.
A long time ago I learned that a string twisted too tightly in the area of contact on the recurved portion of the limb will create alot of noise. This was back when I only used B-50.
I make my own bows. When I started experimenting with fast flight I started making 16 strand strings with 8 extra strands of B-50 through the loops.
I figured that added bearing surface in the string nocks would be an added margin of saftey. Some time later I read about other guys doing the same thing, thus reinforcing what I believed to be the right thing to do.
These extra strands were long enough to pad the entire area of contact with the recurve as well. I used the same old light twist method to ensure a soft string to contact the limb.
Well.....I let my guard down when I made the new string before shooting my new carbon arrows. I decided to try shorter strands of B-50 in the loop area and not worry so much about extra padding on the recurved area of string contact.
At first I was confused. I blammed the carbon arrow's lighter weight for all the noise. It was bad......Sounded like a loud tap on the limb with a piece of wood when I shot. I even had a full set of cat wiskers instead of my normal half set. Then I tried my old 700 grain aluminum arrows............Same noise!!!
I took the string off and built a new one. 16 strands, 8 extra B-50 strands through the loops and extending through the recurve string contact area, with a light twist, just enough to make the splice. The string won't unravel because you will twist it up to ajust length. It's just that you don't create a hard thin rope in the contact area.
The result........Night and day!! I barely need string silencers with a 525 grain carbon arow.
I had to re-learn my old lesson......Fix the string problem before adding the string silencer and limb padding band aids.
Sorry for the length of this post guys, but this string building tip is worth trying.
LPM