A quick Carbon Fiber question

Started by Bradford, December 24, 2012, 11:55:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Bradford

I did a little searching and did not find anything pertaining to this question:

I am designing a "tech" meets wood type take down recurve bow.  I love the look of traditional carbon fiber.. you know the weave, not the straight.  

I was wondering if anyone out there has put a weave carbon fiber under clear glass.. Is it going to ruin the function of the bow?  I am not really using it for any type of enhancement.. just want the look.

thanks everyone!

And Merry Christmas
God gave you hands, use them

MoeM

I would say the worst influence is same as veneer does- but i`d rathes say it will give you some advantage in strenght and stability.

Bradford

the other thought is if it will make a difference in hitting my target weight.
God gave you hands, use them

Crooked Stic

I think you would be fine without the glass. There is a tape availiable if the look is all you are after. Not sure how it would hold though.Try Google for carbon tape.
High on Archery.

Bradford

I would be worried that the limb would separate.  There is no real way to rough up the tape without destroying the appearance.  Unless I find a fabric that looks like carbon fiber.. I will do a search for that.. that would work.
God gave you hands, use them

MoeM

Seperation won`t be a thing if the carbon layer ist soaked with the epoxy raisin.
Tape must not be roughed up so!
Not prepreged tape should be protected by glass or thin lam I heard.
Only one thin layer of tape will propably do only little effect on target weight.
I recently found a laminated bow on I-net with a  glass belly and a backing out of carbon rovings protected by some thin actionboo.

md126

if its just the look you want you can use skin-eez in the carbon fiber pattern or have the bow and/or limbs dipped in the carbon fiber pattern

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©