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INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters



never seen one of these b4 Roy Case new pic

Started by d. ward, February 27, 2009, 10:26:00 AM

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d. ward

here's some pics to look at.Brazilian rosewood riser and white fiberglass limbs...but guess who this bow was built for ???? bd                                

Gray Wolf

I don't who but he must be a strong son-of-gun.
Mike

Mike Shaw

TGMM Family Of The Bow

Henry Hammer

"No man's opinion is any better than his background, his experience and his general common sense." Jack O' Connor

seboomook

Man , those limbs are stout! beautiful wood.
Plunger looks strange on a trad bow.

mwmwmb

what is that on the strike plate area? and what kind o bow is this? Details DOC

kenscollick


Shaun

Low wrist grip, nice reversed taper static tips, string keeper hole in the pin nocks, looks like a pin rest rather than a plunger to me.

Target bow for an Olympic archer?

kurtbel5

No idea and Agree with GW

What is that button?

Hole for a string keeper, I get,why the string groove off of it?

Does that style tip have a name?

kurtbel5

Ha ha
Most of my ? answered before I finished typing

PAPALAPIN

Is that a Plunger?

Looks more like a peg to me.  Like to be usesd as the rest.

What is the actual draw weight?

Was it made for Ulysses so only he could string it and shoot an arrow through the rings on twelve ax heads?
JACK MILLET-TBG,TGMM Family of the Bow


"Don't worry about tomorrow.  If the sun doesn't come up in the morning, we will play in the dark" - ME

The most important part of your hunting setup is the broadhead.  The rest is just the delivery system.

seboomook

I bet you guys are right about the pin rest.
Looking at the side view it is quite long for a plunger.

d. ward

nope its a wood peg.Not a plunger..nope not Glenn...actually the way the bow is built also made me think it was a very heavy draw weight however its 60" 49# and was built in 1967..yap the hole in the end served a couple purpuses one was a sting keeper two it was also used to hang the bow during storage and three also used during the finishing process to hang the bow to apply finish...bd  

Shaun

Built during the Summer of Love, "wavy gravy" wood grain riser with 49# draw to honor how the compassionate Buddha sat by the river for 49 days before reaching the enlightenment of the middle path...  The bow was obviously built for ME!  I knew I forgot something from back then. Where did I leave it?

mwmwmb


d. ward

Shawn you was about half baked that night back in 1967 when you left my place you were wearing bell-bottoms a Zig-Zag tee shirt with flip flops on.You forgot your bow man...I must have been totaly baked becasue I can't remember eather..Joanie said it best...if you can remember you were not there..bd


Bear Heart

Excuse my youthful ignorance, but who is Roy Case?
Traditional Bowhunters of Washington
PBS Associate Member
Jairus & Amelia's Dad
"Memories before merchandise!"

Wade Phillips

Bear Heart - Do a search on threads and you will find out a lot about Roy I. Case, one of the heirs to the Case Tractor Fortune...

   

Doc - I have to admit you really got me on this one. After looking at that nock with the string keeper, my first thought was "that is just like the Roy Case Static Osage I have". Frankly, was way to embarrassed to make an educated guess that it was made by Roy Case. I sure out thought myself on this one...

I was a guest at Roy's home back in the early 1980s. His basement looked like it probably did back in the 1930s or 1940s. I don't remember seeing any working recurves at all. He'd probably given them all away by that time as he passed away only a few years later.

Great old bowmen...

Doc, here's a question for you you....

What archery related Patent was granted to Roy Case???

Now don't guess the string keeper...
"Real Sportsmanship is Fair Play" - Art Young

"Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects." - Will Rogers

d. ward

Wade yes two bows were given to a friend by Roy sometime in the 70's maybe.The were built by a guy name L.E.Kumerow in 1967 for Roy Case.I had 2 of them and traded one to Baldwin and kept the other.The one I have has a cracked lower limb but good looking rosewood riser.
That one stumped me but for some odd reason I thought he had a pat on something to do with the broadheads.It was not the head itself but maybe the dip sodering them ? bd

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