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Is Bow X1-3 a Mollegabet

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meanewood:
If I had to make a short but heavy draw weight bow, I'd choose Elm and make it wide 40-43mm, a high crowned back sapling with a flat belly. Pretty much like X1-3 really!

I'm of the opinion that one tip of X1-3 is the original (the one with the flat facet on the back).
I've seen the bow and the tip has the same patina as the rest of the bow.
The other tip however, has different patina on the end and sure looks like it was cut at a later date.

The flat facet works fine as a nocking method with a bowyers knot or running loop.

JNystrom:
Oh, it would sure be nice to some day inspect these bows! You lucky englishmen...

Have you made any of these X1-3 style bows?
I'm actually surprised they held together, since 30" draw out of 66" bow is quite a lot at 100+ pounds. Maybe with heat treating those bows wouldn't even have developed chrysals...
High crowned back actually effectively does the same thing as heat treating. In my one elm bow i had high crown back, pin knots and heat treating - i think you guess what was the outcome.
Some people heat treat all of their bows and it sure is effective with elm if the material is knot free, but many cases this is not true. I've broken couple of warbows with heat treating when they were already ready.

Anyway, my elm bows have been 72" and i'm planning to do some 75-77" bows, under 70" is just too short to be safe. Maybe if i chose the deflex side of the stave, but.... that's not my habit of making bows! ;D

meanewood:
I'm English, but live in Australia.

Over the past 2 years I have visited the Mary Rose Museum twice and it really is the most wonderful experience!

I went to the Royal Armouries (Leeds) to see the bow X1-3. It's not on display at the moment but if you call ahead of visiting they may show it to you.

Where I live in Adelaide, there is an abundance of Elm, so I have been able to try all sorts of things with it and have made many X1-3 style bows.

JNystrom:
Sounds good! I still have the mary rose museum trip to be made. Too bad the X1-3 bow isn't in the same mary rose museum. Though i noticed royal armories is quite interesting display on its own... Thanks for the tip, quite surprising you can see these items just by asking.

It would be interesting to see these elm bows, so if it's not too much of a hassle, post some of those bows here please! I also have some of warbows i could show here, now that they are not exploding on my face anymore. (lol) Just need to get a someone to photograph draw pictures.

Strelets:
Meanewood, so Dutch elm disease never got to Australia? Elm was almost completely wiped out of Southern England about forty years ago.

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