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Osage Molle-ish
Maxwelliuston:
I had this piece of osage that split a little funny and forced my hand into doing a kind of molle type thing - which I've always been keen to try anyways. The limb that ended up being the bottom had a grain wiggle that split abruptly and narrowly about halfway down the limb. If you can make out in the photos - basically the limb beyond that grain wiggle was largely untouched by me in terms of width. I did my best to mirror the width profile on the upper limb and ended up with probably not the best ratio of bending:non bending limb for this design but it shoots an arrow hard enough.
That wiggly feature on the bottom limb also had a bit of a kink in the deflex direction which only played more tricks on my eye when tillering - that and the fact it was my first try at tillering a molle shape probably resulted in a tiller that could use a little more work but as always I called it when I thought it felt balanced and stable. I didn't have specific goals in terms of weight as this was an experimental piece in a lot of ways. Its the last of my wood from the super fine ringed, dense as a rock WNY osage I cut last year. The 4 resulting sister bows have all been vastly different projects and its bittersweet to reach the end of that particular haul.
68" ntn
40# @28"
1 3/4" at fades, 1"ish stiff levers and just under 3/8 at tips
superdav95:
Nicely done. I love molle style bows. Little tricky to do but sure have a sweet profile.
bjrogg:
Nice experiment. Much better than giving up on it.
I’m sure you learned a lot from it. Sounds like it’s time to find some more Osage.
Thanks for sharing
Bjrogg
George Tsoukalas:
Very nice and a very good bow which typifies the idea that the stave may dictate design. Jawge
smoke:
Really pretty bow! You did a great job on this!
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