Author Topic: Strip bamboo arrows  (Read 21407 times)

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Offline Hawkdancer

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #15 on: September 26, 2020, 12:37:35 am »
Well, now!  A split cane flr rod could be a very worthwhile and profitable endeavor!  Way back n the day, you could one for $5-$10 USD.  On the other hand, $1.00 an hour was good money!  I think the last price I saw on a handmade split cane fly rod was about $150-$200 USD!  Sort of raises the cost of fish >:D )F( (lol)!
Hawkdancer
Life is far too serious to be taken that way!
Jerry

Offline Del the cat

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    • Derek Hutchison Native Wood Self Bows
Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #16 on: September 26, 2020, 03:40:13 am »
This threads got me thinking about flight shooting again. :)
There doesn't seem to be much interest in primitive or self bow flight here in the UK and most of the shoots are GNAS (spits on floor as the only class they have that's of interest to me is the ELB)  >:(
I might try and organise an informal on at the club where I shoot, but I don't think there would be any serious competion :(
TBF there is some good warbow flight shooting, but I'm a bit on the old side for that now... dunno if I can pull much ov r 80# these days.... (yes I know a good 80# may well beat a 120# with flight arrows )
Sorry rambling now.... good thread this :)
Del
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Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #17 on: September 26, 2020, 10:25:43 am »
Well, now!  A split cane flr rod could be a very worthwhile and profitable endeavor! 
Hawkdancer

I don't know if you intended to write Fir rod but it got me thinking. Has anyone made a "split cane" type arrow out of, pick a wood, and compared it with the same wood in it's natural state. Same diameter etc etc

Offline Hawkdancer

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #18 on: September 26, 2020, 11:48:46 am »
I fat fingered that on, should be fly rod!  Don't know what happened to that set-up I had!
Hawkdancer
Life is far too serious to be taken that way!
Jerry

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #19 on: September 26, 2020, 01:38:15 pm »
I thought it was a typo but it sent me in the right direction I think. I cut a bunch of hemlock triangle strips and glued them up. We'll see how stiff it is.

Offline willie

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #20 on: September 26, 2020, 02:04:11 pm »
Quote
it got me thinking. Has anyone made a "split cane" type arrow out of, pick a wood, and compared it with the same wood in it's natural state

 wayne at trueshafts on haida gwaii bought hexshafts process and thinks regluing makes it stiffer.

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #21 on: September 26, 2020, 03:22:01 pm »
 I tried gluing just 1/16"x 3/8" flat lams together once and then made an arrow of it. I don't think I was impressed because I never made any more. But it was a while ago.

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #22 on: September 26, 2020, 03:33:56 pm »
Here's the stuff I used. My plank saw, Made of a grinder and a piece of 1 1/2x3" aluminum channel. The 60° jig made out of scraps from under the bandsaw. My arrow lathe/feather burner made from an old sewing machine. I had to turn an idler pulley to drop the speed. And my prototype glued up old growth Western Hemlock arrow.
« Last Edit: September 26, 2020, 03:41:07 pm by DC »

Offline willie

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #23 on: September 26, 2020, 03:41:57 pm »
I tried gluing just 1/16"x 3/8" flat lams together once and then made an arrow of it. I don't think I was impressed because I never made any more. But it was a while ago.

I suspect resawing the 6 sections to take best advantage of grain orientation has something to do with increasing stiffness. Nice table saw!

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #24 on: September 26, 2020, 04:05:17 pm »
That's something I never thought of. What direction would you put the grain. Maybe with the growth rings radiating out from the center? If you had primo glue joints that would confuse the troops, edge grain all the way around the arrow ::) ::)

Offline willie

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #25 on: September 26, 2020, 04:48:14 pm »
That's something I never thought of. What direction would you put the grain. Maybe with the growth rings radiating out from the center? If you had primo glue joints that would confuse the troops, edge grain all the way around the arrow ::) ::)

I think so. when you spine a shaft, it is often recommended to put the rings lines up and down, thus you are finding the spine in the stiffest direction. when placing the nock. it's often recommended to orient such that the stiffest direction is against the riser/site window. I think this advice presumes the arrow flexing the most side to side on release on account of the nock flipping off the fingers. and the less stiff side of the arrow hopefully does not come into play.

in a situation like flight shooting, reducing stiffness of the arrow to its practical minimum is done when reducing diameter for aerodynamic advantage, so arrows with less stiff sides might be a disadvantage.

if you placed the stiffer/denser part of the wood growth ring flat on the outer most diameter of an arrow in an annular fashion (with a correspondingly lighter pith towards the center) the  physics would be on your side, but you would have to find a board with straight grain ring line for a parallel shaft, or a gentle curving ring line that matched the barrelling desired for a barrelled shaft, and saw each section to follow the early/late ring line.
it could be done, but bamboo might be easier

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #26 on: September 26, 2020, 05:46:26 pm »
That's something I never thought of. What direction would you put the grain. Maybe with the growth rings radiating out from the center? If you had primo glue joints that would confuse the troops, edge grain all the way around the arrow ::) ::)

I think so. when you spine a shaft, it is often recommended to put the rings lines up and down, thus you are finding the spine in the stiffest direction. when placing the nock. it's often recommended to orient such that the stiffest direction is against the riser/site window. I think this advice presumes the arrow flexing the most side to side on release on account of the nock flipping off the fingers. and the less stiff side of the arrow hopefully does not come into play.
I've wondered about this. This is a hard situation to describe and I've read arguments where people were adamant that they were right and the other guy was wrong and it was just their description of what was happening that differed. They were both saying the same thing. I'm going to try ;D I think that the arrow should want to bend away from the bow on release. This can be due to three things. The finger effect that you mentioned but my gut says this is backward. I'll have to look through Tuomos videos to see if I can convince myself. Next is spine oriented so that the arrow wants to bend away from the bow. I'm not even going to try and describe which way the stiff side is facing. And third is one that I've never heard discussed is any slight bend that may be in the arrow. If the arrow is bent that will direct which way the arrow bends, above all else, I think. A good test for arrows would be to have a jig that compresses them lengthwise. See which way they bend from that. Position your cock feather accordingly.

Offline willie

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #27 on: September 26, 2020, 07:04:51 pm »
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And third is one that I've never heard discussed is any slight bend that may be in the arrow.

this is called eccentric compression. definitely a factor in engineering calcs. of course all archers shoot straight arrows, no?

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I think that the arrow should want to bend away from the bow on release

if you flip the nock end away from the bow with a Mediterranean release, the arrow center is bent towards the bow at the moment the string applies the load? I think the trick is to have the arrow be flexing away from the handle a half cycle later as it clears the bow. shooting off the thumb changes things of course.

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spine oriented so that the arrow wants to bend away from the bow.
my guess is with a straight arrow and a mechanical release that imparts little lateral force on the nock at release, spine orientation would become more of a factor. Wouldn't a stiffer arrow vibrate faster, but with less deflection (amplitude)? Maybe Tuomo has some slo-mo of flight arrows somewhere?

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A good test for arrows would be to have a jig that compresses them lengthwise. See which way they bend from that.

this is actually a preferred way to spine atlatl darts by many. I have duplicated a native dart of elliptical cross-section. (it was designed to be thrown flatter sides up and down). the dart, like many others, has a somewhat heavy head that makes the dart droop when held in throwing position. my conclusion is that the dart was tuned to the proper spine with respect to a single side, and just about had to flex in the desired direction with any reasonable throw.

Offline DC

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #28 on: September 26, 2020, 07:14:41 pm »
if you flip the nock end away from the bow with a Mediterranean release, the arrow center is bent towards the bow at the moment the string applies the load? I think the trick is to have the arrow be flexing away from the handle a half cycle later as it clears the bow. shooting off the thumb changes things of course.
So the initial flip is in the "wrong" direction and you're depending on the timing of the oscillations for the arrow to clear the bow? What determines the timing? Arrow length? Spine?

bownarra

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Re: Strip bamboo arrows
« Reply #29 on: September 27, 2020, 01:10:31 am »
With wood shafts it is going to make next to no difference regardless which way you orientate the grain. On a normal shaft you might get one unit of difference.
divide that difference by 6....:)

I don't think there is any worthwhile gain to go with sectional wood arrows.
The sectional cane arrows are worthwhile because you are using the stiffest part of the bamboo AND they are hollow :)
I'd recommenr making some and see the difference compared to equivalent wood shaft.