Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: dreamcraft_archery on March 16, 2022, 03:18:45 pm
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Hi guys!
My first try at sweet cherry (Prunus avium) wood bow. The stave was seasoned for nearly 2 years. I used one sapwood growth ring for the back, the rest was the heartwood. What's interesting - both heartwood and sapwood at the same growth ring at some spots mixing with each other. The same thing can be observed on european ash wood.
I applied my trusty design on this one. Limbs at widest are 2 1/5". I tillered the bow to 45-50 lb at 26", 27" is the max draw. The bow is 66" ntn. For arrow shelf and horn overlays I used cow horn. I'm happy with the outcome. The stick took around 1" of set.
Here is my build along video:
https://youtu.be/ne8jUn8WOPM
Have a great day guys!
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What a beauty! Should be fast, also.
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Thank you! Yes it feels fast!
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Very nice recurve. The bow looks nice with the contrast between the sap wood and heartwood. :OK
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Very cool lookin bow.... nice work
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Beautiful. What's sweet cherry like to work with? I aspire to build a bow out of chokecherry, but it has to be backed. Anyway, I love the heartwood/sapwood contrast.
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Sweet bow! Love those contrasting Colours. Looks a lot like yew.
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Very nice looking recurve. Love the contrast between sapwood and heartwood also. Congrats on a job well done.
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That’s a really nice bow - probably my favorite of the bows I’ve seen you post, and you’ve posted some beauties. Great work!
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Very nice bow. Good work. 8)
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Beautiful outcome from your build.I've got black cherry here that makes excellent bows too if the design does'nt get too stressfull.
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Nice bow. W Badger 66 long , and 2 and 1/5 wide with linen, rawhide, sinew, or maybe no backing at if it is a really good piece of choke cherry should make you a successful bow. I am convinced the cc bows that blew for me were to narrow ,and short for the wood.
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I like it!
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Thank you guys for your kind comments.
Speaking about my feelings about working with this wood - I'd say it's easy to work with hand tools and can be easily violated by the vise so it's a bit soft. I guess the cherry we have here in Europe might be sligthly different. After just a single build it's hard to say something for sure about this species. No doubts it's knotty and as I said the heartwood is mixing on the same growth ring with sapwood. Perhaps they have the same or similar properties. I think it handled this stressful design pretty well.
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Sweet. That’s just they shape I like em.
Bjrogg