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Best Hickory for Bow wood

Started by bigcountry, May 06, 2008, 01:00:00 PM

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bigcountry

I know there is like a bunch of different hickorys from Pecan to pignut to whatever.  What makes a better bowwood and why.

Thank,
Mark

TRAP

I think I read somewhere that Jay Massey's favorite was Pignut.  I've not experimented with Hickories much but respect his opinion.  Trap
"If you don't like change, you're going to like irrelevance even less" Gen. Eric Shinsheki

"If you laugh, and you think, and you cry, that's a full day, that's a heck of a day." Jim Valvano.

John Scifres

I like shagbark because it is the easiest for me to ID.  Pignut is rumored to be the best though.  I've used both and they both are fine bow wood.
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TGMM Family of the Bow

Eric Krewson

I have made a bunch of hickory bows and found hickory is hickory no matter which kind.

Flinttim

Up here in IN our shagbark tends to be cleaner while the pignut tends to have a lot of pins in it.
Genesis 27:3 Now therefore take, I pray thee, thy weapons, thy quiver and thy bow, and go out to the field, and take me some venison;

laddy

Pig nut is as good as anything if it is very dry.  Too wet it shoots slower, I prefer pignut.

bigcountry

Wow, a range of ideas.  Don't ya love trad archery.  Thanks for taking the time to answer.  I am not sure I could id pignut 100%  Rarely see shagbark here in MD. I have a nice hickory in my front yard, thinking of taking down.  Maybe I can take a picture and one of you can id it for me.

**DONOTDELETE**

this I got from Paleoplanet,

HICKORIES: shellbark .69; mocknut, shagbark .72; pignut .75. Due to their extreme strength in tension the hickories are about the hardest bows to break and, unless at least moderately violated, never need backing. Hickory is used for backing other bows

bigcountry

So what am I looking at here mystic?  Is the .69 number density or like a standard in tension with a weight?  

Thanks for posting.

Lost Arra

Mark: I've used a lot of different hickory/pecan. Don't over-think it. They are all good bow woods and they all work great as long as the wood is dry. It is doubtful anyone could tell a performance difference.


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