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Chrystle repair ideas

Started by razorback, August 18, 2015, 08:27:00 AM

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razorback

So I have a hbh pyramid bow that I love the look and feel of. Unfortunately it developed compression fractures I tried Dean's patch on one bat h but then found more, so I put it aside. Was supposed to be a swap bow from a couple of years ago. Anyway I have been thinking if I reduce the weight and get the tiller better and then add a belly lam of 3/16 Osage, would that secure the bow. If the current fractures are moved to the neutral plane will most of the danger from them be removed. I know that all wood bows will break and this one will probably break at one of these points, but hoping this fix might give it a normal lifespan. What do you all think?
Keep the wind in your face and the sun at your back.

John Scifres

Details on design?  Why did it develop chrysals?
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

LittleBen

If you add a belly lam, whatever frets were there before are nearly irrelevant. I assume we're not talking about some horrible nasty fret causing a severe hinge or anything.

razorback

John, it is a Hickory backed Hickory pyramid style bow 66"ttt 2' at fades tapering to tips that are 3/8". Fretts are small and on one edge. I think the side to side thickness is off a little in those spots thus causing the stress. I just checked the osage slat and it is less than 2" wide so i may change the profile to parallel for half the length and then go with the taper to the tips.
Keep the wind in your face and the sun at your back.

mikkekeswick

Osage would only need to be 1 1/2 wide at the fades so you would have room to play.
That edge was too thin so make sure you get it even before gluing on a belly lam.

razorback

That is what I'm thinking. I will measure those areas carefully and get it even and flat before glueing on the belly.
I hate to change the taper profile a s I really like the lines of this bow, but to get a good safe working bow I may have to do it.
Keep the wind in your face and the sun at your back.

George Tsoukalas

Retiller. Mark a big x on the chrysals and leave that area alone because it is already bending too much.

Tiller the other limb to match.

I used to slap on a piece of rawhide over the chrysals but these days I just make another bow.

Jawge

John Scifres

That will work.  But you need to do a cost-benefit analysis  :)

If it were me, I'd probably just build another bow that matched the look and feel.

But I have been known to throw good money after bad and sometimes it's just fun to try something new.
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

takefive

I'm in the same boat with a red elm board bow I made a while back.  No chrysals, but it took more set than I liked and turned out mediocre all around.  Tried some heat treating but wound up with small belly cracks on one limb trying to flip the tips.  I probably could have made a new one in less time than it has taken me to rasp and sand this one down to fit an Osage belly lam and glue it up.  Oh well.
I had backed it with cherry bark and liked the way it looked so much that I couldn't bring myself to toss it.  I'm going to start tillering it today.
Good luck with yours!
It's hard to make a wooden bow which isn't beautiful, even if it's ugly.
-Tim Baker

canopyboy

John makes a good point if you just want the bow working again. But you learn a lot trying to fix these things I think. I've done an osage belly lam to fix frets before. The bow came out quite a shooter and I learned a lot in the process. Would I do it again if the goal was just to complete a bow? Nope. I'd just make another campfire poker out of it and start over. But I'm glad I did it the first couple of times!
TGMM Family of the Bow
Professional Bowhunters Society

"The earth has its music for those who will listen." - Santayana

Roy from Pa

Once a wooden bow develops a problem on me, I turn on the band saw and cut it into fire wood. I'm not going to spend time patching up a bow which I could never trust again..

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