Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: gfugal on August 17, 2018, 08:57:42 am
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https://youtu.be/4a-qev2J8T0
For those who don't have a bench vise, a shave horse, a workshop table and shave pony, or whatever, this may be an option for your draw knives. I ran across it today on Youtube. I had never heard of it before.
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Simple but effective! :OK
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A neat way to clean up staves, or make kindling! I think I would want a leather apron working a draw knife that way, though. Not sure why he worked the rungs that way, though. A good, taut lashing jog should be sufficient, unless it is to hold the notch better.
Hawkdancer
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https://youtu.be/P5QVKqw_B-c
Another idea too!
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But I do eventually make a shave horse (nothing quite compares) I probably will go with a compact design like this.
https://youtu.be/9o8rX0DCm-4
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Some great ideas.
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I have stripped a lot of bark and sapwood off osage by putting one end of the stave at the base of a tree and the other end on my chest, I would lean forward and go to work with a draw knife. This was green wood right off the stump and cut very easily. I was also much younger and osage cutting crazy at the time.
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I have stripped a lot of bark and sapwood off osage by putting one end of the stave at the base of a tree and the other end on my chest, I would lean forward and go to work with a draw knife. This was green wood right off the stump and cut very easily. I was also much younger and osage cutting crazy at the time.
Interesting! Wouldn't that hurt your chest? When I debark staves I just lean it up against the wall or a fork in the tree, and kneel as I pull down, taking of strips of bark off that way. But this method doesn't allow you to get the very tips as you can't pull down past the ground.
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I put a pad on my chest and do the very ends later in a vise.
This was not ring chasing precision work, this was hogging off sapwood and bark quickly when I had a lot of osage to process and get sealed with shellac. I did this draw knifing in the woods next to my yard. I chose this place because I didn't have to clean up the mountains of bark and shavings I produced like I would had I done the same work in my shop.