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Double Carbon Success

Started by Wagstaff, July 13, 2016, 06:20:00 PM

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Wagstaff

Anyone else experimented with carbon in longbow limbs?  

We're having fun with this one.   After tweaking our limb design to get the most we could out of it, we stepped it up a bit by using carbon in place of glass.  

We built this one on the most SOLID material we could find.  

We started shooting it before final sanding and spray finish, but WOW, its fast and stable.  

62" 48 lbs@28"
492 grain carbon arrow, avg 196 fps
Fingers released


I'm Very proud of the work my son did on this bow, Specifically designed and built for a competitive shooter.  

The  riser is slightly heavier than exotic hardwood, and pleasant to shoot.  We were concerned that such a solid riser might lead to a "buzz" feeling or a "ring" when shot.. No such thing here.. Its fun to shoot this one.!

Better pics after its finished...



Pago

Exciting can't wait to see more.
The best made plan won't get it made the way you planned.

Mike Faith

Very nice, love the design and obviously it works!!

do y'all have a website?
focusing on the problem is not a solution-anonymous

kennym

Jeff, that's kickin butt! Be over 200 with 9gpp and a hooter shooter like Blacky uses!    :eek:

Great job man!
Stay sharp, Kenny.

   https://www.kennysarchery.com/

chackworth3

Excellent numbers on that one. Nice job

jess stuart

That is exceptional!!  What type of carbon did you use?  I am not very familiar with carbon but, understand there is a great difference in different types.  Again great job.

Trux Turning

Nice job and a great looking bow and numbers.

mikkekeswick

Nice bow  :)
What difference in stack do you figure compared to the same design in glass?

Wagstaff

We picked up 10+fps on this bow. Carbon  definitely adds a little speed and cast.  Part of the gain may be due to the limb geometry, and/or the super rigid riser materials.   We are on a mission to find out how much each contributes..  
 
Your Mileage May Vary

Backing Our longbow with the woven carbon we used at first just wasnt helping that much.  We went to Gordons Uni Carbon, in combination with thin woven bias carbon in the core.  

The CORE laminations are reduced by 15-20% compared with the same stack using glass.   Carbon thickness varies, depending on your target weight. The reduction in core thickness is related to the thickness of your carbon.  

We just laid up the exact same stack on a wood riser, to see how much this extra rigid black riser may be helping, if any...

PV

Nice looking bow! Carbon belly?
I had the same results with the woven carbon also. Been using the Gordons uni for many years but have never tried it on the belly of a bow. Heard too many horror stories..

beachbowhunter

A friend of mine (goes by Cupcake on TG) does double carbon on all of his longbows. Gordon Uni like yours. No failures to date.

It would be interesting to see the limb profile. How aggressive is it?
Ishi was a Californian                   :cool:

Mad Max

I would rather fail at something above my means, than to succeed at something  beneath my means  
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Pheonixarcher

I've been thinking about trying some carbon.  Do you have any recommendations or tips?
Plant a fruit or nut tree today, and have good hunting tomorrow.
=}}}}}-----------------------------}>

Crittergetter

Man you guys just keep pushing the envelop!! Good work and congrats!!!
An elitist mentality creates discord, even among the elite!
"I went jackalope hunting but all I saw was does!"
Luck is when preparedness meets opportunity, I just need more opportunities!

BenBow

Sweet looking! Pictures of braced and full draw please
But his bow will remain steady, and his hands will be skillful; because of the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, because of the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel,  (Genesis 49:24 [NETfree])

Sixby

I have been using carbon in all of my bows for the last 15 years. I do not recommend using uni on the back although its faster by a teeny bit than a matrix. I have had two bows get splinters on the back with uni carbon so stopped using it quite some time back. Both were longbows. What I use now is uni with a carbon weave in a combination layup and either stabil core or a combination carbon of weave and uni toward the belly in the core. The numbers are outstanding on your bow. Nice job.
God bless and Merry Christmas, steve

forestdweller

Nice looking bow and that's very fast for a longbow, the fastest I've heard of yet actually.

One question though, is it true that if a carbon bow fails on you it will splinter a lot more than a glass bow failure?

Happy holidays everyone!

That's what I'm talkin' bout...  Nice to see you max out your limb potential before you used carbon to up the ante... Good job... Would love to see some side profile pics at brace and full draw...  A DFC would be cool to see also if you are into numbers...

kennym

Quote

We just laid up the exact same stack on a wood riser, to see how much this extra rigid black riser may be helping, if any... [/QB]
Jeff, how did the wood riser fare? I think that riser flex is some loss of performance but no data on it. Thx!, k
Stay sharp, Kenny.

   https://www.kennysarchery.com/

Crooked Stic

I have used binghams carbon and another bias ply I think the most FPS I ever gained was 3-4. I would think your riser with no give in it probably helps as much as the carbon.
High on Archery.

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