I might have said that I was wantin to make a glass backed bow.
This is about like me sayin I want to fly in a dang airplane.
Any way it don't hurt to ask questions.
So has there ever been a glass bow made with no shelf. Why would anyone cut a shelf when it's so natural to just shoot off your hand. This is a serious question, at least as serious as I ever get.
Also I just read that Kennym is no longer going to supply lams and what not.
Well I think this possible bow won't have a shelf. That means that the arrows will have to be well broken in to that paticular weight and the geometry of the bow.
That means that it will be strictly a woody slinger. Alums don't break in like wood. Their molecular structure is determined by the alloy and heat and extrusion forces. They is what they is.
I've heard all the reasons that carbos are the cat's meow but I won't go into that.
Wood is of the earth and heaven. It grows in the same natural forces that we put them thru in archery. A gift that our ancestors used with great success in the past. It dont need a shelf.
Next question what length semi longbow is the best. It will be a hunter first. Is there a overall good length range that should be considered?
Strang, you and Jim resemble each other so close I should have guessed ya'll was cousins.
Another question has anyone ever tried to glue a different type of a material under the glass? In other words a non wood material that would be between the glass and your veneer.
If a material was compatible with the smoothe on and presented no assembly problems during glue-up, I wonder if it would be like looking down inside the bow at a cool pattern?