Main Discussion Area > Bows
Limb Thickness - Rules of Thumb
willie:
--- Quote from: Jim Davis on April 11, 2025, 08:48:12 pm ---Certainly not. That's the design that is often called a pyramid bow. That's the only kind I make anymore. Easiest to tiller by far--one thickness, straight taper.
--- End quote ---
Jim, when you tiller a pyramid, do you monitor the thickness for consistency, ie take off wood for the full length of the limb?
or perhaps tiller to a bend profile and observe consistent thickness after the fact?
Jim Davis:
With a stave, I start by band sawing off the bulk of the waste wood on the belly side, taking the thickness down to about an inch and a half.
Then I layout the width taper and handle width and saw close to those lines.
Then I mark the thickness at both sides (9/16" or a little less.) I band saw near one side line, tilting the wood to leave the center of the cross section thicker, to make sure I don't cut too thin on the bottom side of the cut. Then I turn the stave over and do the same along the other side line.
Then I attack the raised center of the belly until it is flat (using progressively finer rasps and scrapers as flatness approaches.)
The limbs are surprisingly close to tiller at that point. I work down the thickness of any stiff spots until things are bending evenly.
Jim Davis:
Here's one from 20 years ago.
Jim Davis:
bigger
Jim Davis:
Didn't work. Trying a different one
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