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multi-lam bows

Started by LESKEN2011, August 03, 2014, 08:39:00 AM

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LESKEN2011

I have made a good many bows with all natural materials. By that I mean wood, bamboo, backed, multi-lam, etc. I just recently made my first couple of glass bows which caused me to want to know more about them. One thing I am curious about. I initially was under the impression that the reason for multiple laminations in bows was to allow the pieces to bend in the form under pressure without breaking, but as I looked at the Hill style longbows there isn't really that much of a bend other than the handle fade. Why wouldn't you use a single piece of wood between the glass rather than multiple ones? Would a single one take more set? Would it be weaker? Just curious..
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Kenny from Mississippi, USA

Ice Mike

I'm no expert by any means, but my understanding is that there are a few reasons for the multiple lams.

For one, with multiple thin lams it is easier and more predictable to calculate a final draw weight. Second, with all of the "character"  wood used in glass bows, multiple lams help reinforce the weak areas from one peice to the other.  Third, yes, a single thicker lam would be more likely to take a set. One more I think would be that you couldn't make a decent bend up the fade curve without damaging the lam if it is too thick.

Again, this is just the way I understand and that does not in any way make it an end all answer.

Bowjunkie

Multiple lams of thinner wood are easier to bend in forms and around shapely risers than a single thick piece. They may help a tiny, tiny bit in taking less set, but a few more important reasons are... multi-lam bows are less likely to fail because of an issue in the wood. An issue like a knot, cluster of pin knots, growth ring runout, grain runout, and others can mean the death of a bow made from a single piece, whereas in a multi-lam bow, the effects of a defect in one lam can be virtually negated by virtuous wood around it.

Using multiple lams in a bow also helps to distribute stress more evenly... stress at the fades and wedges and such. I have seen single-wood lam bows, sandwhiched between glass fail in such places where I feel surely that multiple lams there would have been their saving grace.

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