Trad Gang
Main Boards => Trad History/Collecting => Topic started by: ksbowman on December 04, 2010, 04:10:00 PM
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Is it possible or practical to add another thickness of glass to the face or back of an existing glass laminate to increase the weight of a bow without disrupting the shooting of a bow? I have a bow I'd like to refinish, but don't want to lose any draw weight in case I'd get carried away on sanding. Right now it is lower in weight than I would like. I was thinking about this as an option.
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I would sell it and buy a higher weight. Very impractical idea.
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Wasn't there someone on this site that was taking old risers and putting new limbs on them?
Dave
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Mike at Maddog just put new limbs on my broken "59 Kodiak and it is a fine shooter!!!You cna get the weight and lenght you want also. Drawback only black or brown glass, but my '59 is in brown and a beauty. It can be seenover on stickbow in the *********** as custom '59 kodiak. Dick
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ksbowman, you won't loose any weight if you don't get carried away.
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Instead of sanding use a straight edged knife and scrap the finish off. I done a few bows and most of the older finishes just fly off the bow.....wear goggles! Then sand with fine grit where needed. Go easy on the limb edges.
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I tried it one time with a set of limbs that I made that came out too light, I roughed them up, cleaned with laquer thinner, put them back on the form, and glued another piece of clear glass over them (back of the limb)with Smooth-on. For some reason they did'nt adhere, I junked the limbs abd started over.