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INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters |
RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS
LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS |
Quote from: derekdiruz on September 16, 2025, 10:07:33 AMI use a CNC. I'm a 1 man shop, and the real benefit with a CNC is allowing me to do something else.
For instance, it's much quicker to just hold a limb edge against a belt sander to profile it. But the CNC takes 1 minute to set up, and while I'm able to prep another glue up, or do tips, or anything else, it's profiling the limbs.
Bed size, spindle/router size, bit size, stepper motor sizes, all play into the efficacy of the CNC.
You can get a tiny one that uses palm routers and do risers just fine. The bigger hold up is the design. Most of those will come with base level software and not have the ability to design in 3D. With that, you'll have a riser that's consistently cut with say, pad angles, but you will have 80% of the work left to do by hand with shaping.
If you plan to get into CNC, you'll likely want to go the route of 3HP spindles or bigger, so you can use 1/2" bits not just 1/4" bits. The bigger CNC will include higher end software (or you could spend a few thousand to get this software otherwise) to allow you to get deeper into design. The feed rates of better CNC may be in the 400 IPM range versus the 150 IPM max range, meaning you have much less time running the machine.
There's a massive learning curve to CNC. It's not just "buy one and go" unfortunately.
I've used mine for roughly 200 bows over the past 3 years, and I feel like I'm only about 60% of the usage I could be with it.
Good luck, if you have any specific questions I'd be happy to help.
Quote from: McDave on Today at 09:14:17 AMIdeally, an endless string should have just enough twists so the string holds together as a unified whole and is not just a collection of individual strands. If there are more than two twists per inch, that is too much in my opinion. Others may differ. My experience is that the first 15-20 twists after the string is made don't seem to change the length very much, but after that 4 twists should make a noticeable difference in the length.
You want to twist it in the direction that twists will tighten the center serving. With the bow unstrung, twist the center serving in both directions. One direction will tighten it; the other direction will loosen it.
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