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As far as local wood, Yew and vine maple are probably the best but I think yew is better used in thick bows like your english style longbows rather than recurves. From what I remember reading, vine maple is very good for the thinner and wider flat type bows. I dont think yew would make a crappy flat bow though. Its hard to resist the beauty of Yew for making any kind of bow in my opinion. I think the main issue with yew is that it would take set much easier than vine maple.
those are some are some sweet bows man, beutiful for sure, when you guys are shaping them do you do it 100% with a draw knife or do you run it through a band saw and scroll saw until its close?
Quote from: jackmaster on April 02, 2014, 02:09:22 PMthose are some are some sweet bows man, beutiful for sure, when you guys are shaping them do you do it 100% with a draw knife or do you run it through a band saw and scroll saw until its close?If you've got a little bandsaw that will for sure save you time in the roughing out process but you will spend quite a bit of time rasping it down to your drawn out dimensions and then more time fine tuning the tiller of it once you can put a string on it. NEVER rely too much on the band saw though. There will be that one time you decide to trim really close with your bandsaw and it will take too much and ruin it. I know because I have done it a couple times and turned a potential 50 lb bow into a 30 lb one.
Don't count out black locust. Tons of it here in the south sound and is very easy to get staves of quality diameter. Seasons well also.