Here are some of the bows I've made or aquired. Most of the bows I've made have been tested to destruction, and there are several I've started but not finished.
OK, so here are three bows I have pictures of. They are, from left to
right: 1) an old 45 lb "Wolverine" English style longbow, with horn nocks
and fiberglass(?) backing; 2) my first bow, a 28 lb working handle maple flatbow;
3) my fourth bow, 40 lb pyramid style cherry flatbow described in "The Traditional
Bowyers Bible." The first picture shows the three bows strung. You can
see that they all have a very low brace height for the string, but I've moved
to a larger brace height since the picture was taken. I still like a low
brace height, and I can hold the bow such that my wrist doesn't get hit, but
I had the brace height so low that the back of my thumb was getting hit.
Ouch.
I received
this bow as a gift from a friend, who found it among her possessions.
We don't know how old it is, or really anything about the bow's personal history.
It is a D-section bow backed with either fiberglass or a fiber-board of some
type. I think the wood could be either yew or oak, but its stained so its a
little hard to tell. The nocks are horn, traditionally shaped. The
only markings on the bow are a decal that says "Wolverine" and a stamp in the
backing that says "KIBBE 45" If you can tell me more about this bow, please
email me.
The bow draws and shoots pretty well, but with some handshock.
Since I have been shooting it, the string follow increased from about 3/4
of an inch to 1 1/2 inches, but seems to have stabilised there. Its
also a pretty stable shot, when I'm in practice, being consistent, etc.
Once, the string broke completely through while shooting. The arrow
almost reached the target, the bow seems to have sustained no damage whatsoever.
This is the
first bow I made, and it is still shooting. I made it according to the
starter bow specs in TTBB, out of the straightest grained
maple board you ever saw. It draws about 28 lbs, but is so whip-ended
that it shoots a low arrow speed. On the other hand, there is absolutely
no hand shock :-) This bow has at least 5,000 shots on it, and really
hasn't changed much after the first several hundred shots it took to develop
its string follow.
You can see the poor tillering job in the picture. I got excited
I guess, and removed wood from the wrong part of the bow. I still
occasionally shoot this bow for several reasons, nostalgia being one of
them. It's good for practicing consistency, due to the low poundage
and the wide handle (high paradox).
This is my
favorite bow that I have made. Its made from a cherry board, with a glued
on riser. It is the pyramid style flatbow described in TTBB.
It is light (1 pound total weight), a very smooth draw, and very fast shooting
with no handshock. It draws 40 lbs, but shoots much faster than most 40
lb bows. The limbs narrow down to a point, and the nocks are rawhide stops
that are actually tied on (I'll eventually get a picture of it). However,
I accidentally gouged the edge while mking the bow, and it has developed some
compression fractures in the lower limb, about 6-8 inches from the tip.
You can see this in the picture, but it gets much more pronounced after about
20 shots or so. I still shoot the bow for comparisons' sake, but not very
often. I have been toying with the idea of backing the bow with something,
but haven't gotten around to it yet. We'll see what happens...