I was visited by a gentleman who is 76 years old and has been making bows and arrows for most of that time.
He has some amazing work and we had a good talk. However he used some terms I was unfamiliar with. I did not have time to write down his full explanations and he has not written his own book.
What can you all tell me - or what books are out there that may clarifiy what he was talking about - e.g.
Modulus - the properites of the woods and how they recover for flexing, compression and extension. I am familialr with the term in fly rods, and maybe it is essentially the same.
Trapping - the working of wood laminations which includes thickness and width and the ratio to gain the best compression/tension throughout the limb
Heat Tempering - carefully controlling the heating of various woods to get the best tension and compression characteristics. Especially helpful with bamboo
8:1 ratio - a thickness of limb vs. overall width trying to keep the tips slender working down to wider main limbs which will produce the best arrow speed.
He does self bows quite well using this science, but mainly does laminations of various woods trying to achieve great arrow speed in bows with smooth draw and little to no hand shock.
At 76 he can still fully draw the 65 to 70 lb bows.
Quite an education.
What can you tell me about this or any written sources.
I will not divulge his name without his permission, but he does live locally.
I have a lot to learn having been making self bows only about 10 years and just starting out in the laminations. I am not too interested in getting into fiberglass or recurves - plenty of great folk been doing that a lot longer than I have left. But still eager to learn the basics.