One too many Robin Hood films and I have cracked. Time to try this bow making thing. Well, actually I had already collected the materials before I saw the film, so I must have been well on the way.
You must understand that this is from first principles and I am very much a beginner.
I had noted when out with my niece that a local plantation of bamboo in the park had some good strong dead canes that seemed nice and springy. We came away with 3 about 7 feet long, each about as thick as my finger.
First I simply tied a piece of cotton string to each end of one bamboo using a clove hitch. For an ad hock arrow I grabbed one of my hand drills (elder) and about 12-15mm diameter. I notched the thicker end, pulled back and fired at my shed wall. Got a satisfying "thunk" and a mildly marked panel.
OK, so clove hitch will do until further notice? It seemed secure and tightened well. With bamboo the nobbly rings will probably keep it from sliding.
The next thought was - how can I get a bigger "thunk"? I tightened the string more so that the natural shape of the bow was ..... a little bowed. This got me a bigger "thunk". But I wanted more.
I had heard the phrase "draw weight" and not fully understood. Now with my hands on a bow it seemed like this must refer to how much weight would be used to bend the bow by gravity that I had done with my arms. How to measure that weight? Well I had some bathroom scales in the shed. A little thought and I came up with weighting the scales with a sack of charcoal and putting the bow round the sack and pulling upwards on the string and seeing how much weight came off the scales for the amount of bend I had put in the bow when firing an arrow. I found that I had about 5lb of draw weight (if that is the correct usage).
OK, so how to increase the draw weight?
How about 3 bamboos? I lashed my 3 bamboos together (2 one way round and the 3rd the other way round) with about 6- 8 simple knots along the length, reattached the string and tried again. First shot and the string broke. So I moved to a quite thick modern nylon parachord. No chance of that breaking? With this setup of 3 bamboos and thick cord I tried again. A bigger "Thunk"! A draw weight this time when measured of about 10 lb (not the 15 I had expected). I tightened the string more to make it a natural D shape and got a "THunk". So I was getting better.
Then I thought, why use the whole length of the bow when I would get more bend and therefore more tension from a shorter length. So I retied one end a couple of feet down the length of the bow so that I had an effective bow of about 5 feet. Pulling on this gave a satisfying tension. I could not measure it on the scales as I was exceeding the weight of the charcoal bag. When I fired with this I got a "THUnk". Coming along.
I did note that the arrow tended to twist in the air and so did not hit the wall perfectly in the line of flight.
Well, that is about it for now. More another day.
But I have some questions.
Why do you thin the ends of a bow? I suspect it is to get an even bend. But why do you want an even bend? In my setup the thickness of the bow would be even down the length, with no significant tapering. I presume the middle did bend most but why would it?
Is it a problem having a thick bow string?
Could I solve the twisting in flight by making a bridge in the middle of my multi stick bamboo bow so that the arrow passed in between the two halves?
Are shorter bows more efficient than long ones as I seemed to find?
You must understand that this is from first principles and I am very much a beginner.
I had noted when out with my niece that a local plantation of bamboo in the park had some good strong dead canes that seemed nice and springy. We came away with 3 about 7 feet long, each about as thick as my finger.
First I simply tied a piece of cotton string to each end of one bamboo using a clove hitch. For an ad hock arrow I grabbed one of my hand drills (elder) and about 12-15mm diameter. I notched the thicker end, pulled back and fired at my shed wall. Got a satisfying "thunk" and a mildly marked panel.
OK, so clove hitch will do until further notice? It seemed secure and tightened well. With bamboo the nobbly rings will probably keep it from sliding.
The next thought was - how can I get a bigger "thunk"? I tightened the string more so that the natural shape of the bow was ..... a little bowed. This got me a bigger "thunk". But I wanted more.
I had heard the phrase "draw weight" and not fully understood. Now with my hands on a bow it seemed like this must refer to how much weight would be used to bend the bow by gravity that I had done with my arms. How to measure that weight? Well I had some bathroom scales in the shed. A little thought and I came up with weighting the scales with a sack of charcoal and putting the bow round the sack and pulling upwards on the string and seeing how much weight came off the scales for the amount of bend I had put in the bow when firing an arrow. I found that I had about 5lb of draw weight (if that is the correct usage).
OK, so how to increase the draw weight?
How about 3 bamboos? I lashed my 3 bamboos together (2 one way round and the 3rd the other way round) with about 6- 8 simple knots along the length, reattached the string and tried again. First shot and the string broke. So I moved to a quite thick modern nylon parachord. No chance of that breaking? With this setup of 3 bamboos and thick cord I tried again. A bigger "Thunk"! A draw weight this time when measured of about 10 lb (not the 15 I had expected). I tightened the string more to make it a natural D shape and got a "THunk". So I was getting better.
Then I thought, why use the whole length of the bow when I would get more bend and therefore more tension from a shorter length. So I retied one end a couple of feet down the length of the bow so that I had an effective bow of about 5 feet. Pulling on this gave a satisfying tension. I could not measure it on the scales as I was exceeding the weight of the charcoal bag. When I fired with this I got a "THUnk". Coming along.
I did note that the arrow tended to twist in the air and so did not hit the wall perfectly in the line of flight.
Well, that is about it for now. More another day.
But I have some questions.
Why do you thin the ends of a bow? I suspect it is to get an even bend. But why do you want an even bend? In my setup the thickness of the bow would be even down the length, with no significant tapering. I presume the middle did bend most but why would it?
Is it a problem having a thick bow string?
Could I solve the twisting in flight by making a bridge in the middle of my multi stick bamboo bow so that the arrow passed in between the two halves?
Are shorter bows more efficient than long ones as I seemed to find?