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Osage orange design?
WhistlingBadger:
I scored what appears to be a nice Osage orange log from a friend. It's been sitting in his shed for around 20 years, he says. It does have some extensive checks--I won't know how bad until I get the bark off a stave and start working it--but I think I was able to avoid the worst ones with judicial splitting.
So, I've never worked with Osage before...I seem to remember reading that narrow and deep, with a D-cross section and fairly bendy tips is the way to go. Is that right? All my successful bows thus far have been flatbows, so this is new territory for me. Recommendations?
I'm hoping to get a c. 60# bow that will draw smoothly, be reasonably forgiving of my creative ineptitude, and cast a 600-700 grain arrow with authority.
Hamish:
Osage is A grade bow wood. You can go narrow, thin, like a longbow, or you can go wider, flat and shorter in length.
What diameter and length is your log?
Eric Krewson:
I don't know about "bendy" tips, I have never done that in about 150 osage bows.
You can make any design out there with osage, like was said; wide and flat, narrower with a slightly rounded belly or full on ELB with a D cross section.
I make mine 1 1/4" wide, non bending handle, 64" NTN for draw lengths up to 28". I have a slight radius on the belly that transitions to a more D profile at the tips. I make my tips narrow and a little deeper for strength. I always add a tip overlays because I think they enhance the looks of a bow.
Belly and tip, the extra groove is for a parachute cord bow stringer, very safe and won't slip off.
JW_Halverson:
If it has nice rings (i.e. thicker late wood than the lighter colored early wood) then you can get away with as narrow as inch and a quarter at the fades. I prefer at least inch and three-eighths, but I've had the narrower limbed bows take a little more set but shoot just fine.
If you find checks that got into the heartwood, don't lose hope! Just get to the very first layer of yellow, give it a light sanding with 150 grit, and try laying out a bow that avoids a check that runs out the edge. If you don't get it, don't fret it. Carefully try the next growth ring, and repeat trying to find a layout that avoids checks that run out the edge.
More than once I have been able to lay out a bow with one limb on the far right edge of a stave and the other limb on the far left edge of a stave. So what? Lay out those lovely limbs and draw in a handle that connects the two. You'll wanna make sure the grip and fades are a little more robust, but you can still pull off a bow even if the center lines of the two limbs don't connect in the grip area. Osage is pretty forgiving stuff.
Pat B:
Like said above, you can make any style bow from Osage. Please post a few pics of the log, stave and end grain. Also, after you remove the bark and sapwood be sure to seal the back and ends. Even if it is a 20 year old log it still has some moisture in it and it can check if you don't seal it. I like to use spray shellac but any shellac will do. I like shellac because it is easily removed later with alcohol.
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