Trad Gang
Main Boards => The Bowyer's Bench => Topic started by: green valley gobbler on February 01, 2018, 07:57:00 AM
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Buddy and I are just finishing up our first laminated recurve based off of Bingham's plans. While filing the nocks I tore about a half inch out of the glass, belly side of the bow. It's basically right where the string lays down over the glass. It's a thinner layer of glass (our glass thickness was 0.50), peeled off while I was filing with the rat tail file. Is this something to be concerned about? And can we put anything over it as far as glues, etc. I was surprised how easily it peeled, was filing gently when it happened. Thanks in advance!
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You could probably put a very thin wood lam over it. Will just look like an accent. I've seen some bows with them. Riser wood scrap made as thin as you can would be good combo.
You could also try wicking superglue in it first, you have to work fast, wick the glue, plastic wrap and clamp the best you can. It may still show, I've had so so results this way, clear glass seems to always show the repair.
I put a bubinga strip on the belly of a D/R to try to stiffen the tips. It was 10" in from nock. didn't stiffen it much at all but don't look bad.
Think it was about .025" thick.
I always file toward bow back so if you have a lift, the tip overlay will cover it. A sharp file helps too.
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To add to what Kenny said, I use a chainsaw file instead of my rat tail file because it has a much less aggressive cut and less likely to tear out.
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What they said. Lol
I put my overlays on first. Then, using chainsaw file, cut my groove across the back of the limb. And finish with side groove, filing from belly towards the groove on the back.
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4x.... Use a chainsaw file... I am wondering if the increased thickness of the rat tail file wedged in the groove and ripped your glass...
Right tool for the right job....
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You got to go easy filling against the glass on nocks. I've tore a few. I add super glue and sand them back as much as possible to cover or remove the damaged area. I have never added overlays after but I bet that will do. I still would soak super glue into the split first.