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Increase draw weight

Started by Doods70, May 28, 2014, 06:32:00 AM

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Doods70

Greetings.

I hope this is the right forum to ask this. I have a PSE snake bow which I shoot barebow using a mongolian thumb release.

It is only 22 lbs and I hoped to increase the draw weight. Would anyone here point me to a site that shows how I can laminate this with some fiberglass tape?? or something...anything that can increase draw weight to 30-32 lbs.

Thank you so much
Doods

snapper1d

You could pike with out adding the ugly tape to it.I cant remember the formula right now and it on the other computer thats down at the moment.Someone here will have it.You may do a search on Piking Formula and find it.

snapper1d

Well I guess I lied I did have it on this computer so here it is.

 EXAMPLE:
The bow is 68" long,45 lb.@ 28",you want 55 lb @ 28"
 
 55lb divided by 45 lb = 1.22(1.22%)
 Lose the 1 (100%)
 0.22 divided by 5 = 0.044
 0.044 x 68" = 2.99"
 2.99" divided by 2 = 1.495
 So take 1.495" (almost 1 1/2") off each end.

 To find out what a given reduction in length will produce:
 EXAMPLE: The bow is 68" long,45 lb. @ 28",you only want to take of 2" (1"
 off each end)
Take off  2" for a 66"bow
                                                                                       Short Way
 1" x 2 = 2"                                                                      66" = 1.145 x lbs
 2" divided by 68" =0.029                                              64" = 1.295 x lbs
 0.029 x 5 = 0.145 (14.5%)                                           62" =  1.440 x lbs
 Add 1 (100%) for 1.145 (114.5%)                               60" = 1.590 x lbs
 1.145 x 45 lb =51.525 lb (just over 51 1/2 lb)

Take off 4 " for a 64" bow              

4" divided by 68" =.059
.059 x 5 = .295
Add 1 for 1.295
1.295 x 45lb = 58.275

Take of 6" for a 62" bow

6" divided by 68" = .088
.088 x 5 = .44
Add 1 for 1.44
1.44 x 45lb = 64.8

Take of 8" for a 60" bow

8" divided by 68" = .118
.118 x 5 = .59
Add 1 for 1.59
1.59 x 45lb = 71.55

inksoup

re: snapper...

this was very helpful thank you.

i know i was not alone...
these are not the droids you are looking for.

inksoup

and ...
you can also add 2-3mm lam on the belly side of the bow. that will increase the bow weight as well. but i don't know how much? i think it depends on the lam type (oak, hornbeam, etc...).

good luck
these are not the droids you are looking for.

snapper1d

I used to sell tons of wood bow blanks and helped people get good bows from them.Most newbee's will end up under weight on their first bows and by using the piking formula they can still get a decent bow.It make a difference in one standing in the corner to look at and one you can go out and shoot and even get some game with on your first try.A good bow on the first try makes real interest in bow making.Its something that should be passed along or it will be a dying art and lost for ever.

Doods70

Everyone seems to be in agreement on the piking of the bow. Since I am new...I am assuming that means cutting it based on the formula above.

I may have forgotten to mention that the PSE snake is a composite bow..."plastic". Will the piking work on all bows of just wood bows?

Thank you again.

snapper1d

It will pretty much work on anything.

Mad Max

QuoteOriginally posted by snapper1d:
Well I guess I lied I did have it on this computer so here it is.

 EXAMPLE:
The bow is 68" long,45 lb.@ 28",you want 55 lb @ 28"
 
 55lb divided by 45 lb = 1.22(1.22%)
 Lose the 1 (100%)
 0.22 divided by 5 = 0.044
 0.044 x 68" = 2.99"
 2.99" divided by 2 = 1.495
 So take 1.495" (almost 1 1/2") off each end.

 To find out what a given reduction in length will produce:
 EXAMPLE: The bow is 68" long,45 lb. @ 28",you only want to take of 2" (1"
 off each end)
Take off  2" for a 66"bow
                                                                                       Short Way
 1" x 2 = 2"                                                                      66" = 1.145 x lbs
 2" divided by 68" =0.029                                              64" = 1.295 x lbs
 0.029 x 5 = 0.145 (14.5%)                                           62" =  1.440 x lbs
 Add 1 (100%) for 1.145 (114.5%)                               60" = 1.590 x lbs
 1.145 x 45 lb =51.525 lb (just over 51 1/2 lb)

Take off 4 " for a 64" bow              

4" divided by 68" =.059
.059 x 5 = .295
Add 1 for 1.295
1.295 x 45lb = 58.275

Take of 6" for a 62" bow

6" divided by 68" = .088
.088 x 5 = .44
Add 1 for 1.44
1.44 x 45lb = 64.8

Take of 8" for a 60" bow

8" divided by 68" = .118
.118 x 5 = .59
Add 1 for 1.59
1.59 x 45lb = 71.55
what what what
Jethro Bodine can't figure that out   :knothead:    :laughing:    :laughing:
I would rather fail at something above my means, than to succeed at something  beneath my means  
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