Completed that Sudbury style bow I briefly displayed in my last post. Found a remarkable difference between the heat treat by heat gun vs coals, I found the coals did a much better job at penetrating further into the wood. This could be due to a number of factors perhaps my heat gun isn't up to task or the more radiant heat from the coals over 3 hours slowly baked the wood rather than pinpoint hardened areas?
that looked to be a nice red oak board you used. maybe a lot different from whats commonly available in North America. possibly not as dry to begin with?
Beautiful work on that bow
Thankyou I'm happy with how the bow turned out, quite shocked at how well the heat treatment worked. The bow is a tad plain at the moment but I'm still deciding whether to decorate it with some painting or drawing. Just haven't decided on a kind of marking pen yet though I'm looking at Sakura Pigma Archival Ink pens for fade resistance.
The Red Oak board is American according to the website and the people I talked too at the lumber yard, though apparently there are around 20 some species of Red and White Oaks so it could be an outlier species? We do have a relatively high humidity here in NZ so that could make a difference?
I really did get a great board from the selection they had, it was a 6m long board that was just over 8 inches wide. The grain was nice and straight so I milled the board into 4 boards 2" wide and 70" long, I'm currently working on the third milled board and have one to go. I do have a large offcut section that I might make into kids bows for an upcoming homeschooling event here.