3Rivers Archery




The Trad Gang Digital Market














Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters




RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS


Main Menu

Yet another string question

Started by Greg Owen, December 14, 2007, 12:02:00 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Greg Owen

I just received a used bow that has a frayed string. The bow is an 1950s vintage Bear Cub. The string it has measures 56.5" not under tension. The bow is marked 62".  I assume that this string is a 58" string. This fits with all the recommendations I have seen in my searching of the other threads here. One question I have is this. How much can you effectively shorten a string by twisting it? If 58 inches turns out too long can I twist it to a 57 inch? I would suspect 1/2 inch would probably be about all you'd want to shorten by twisting but thats based on a guess. Anyone have a good idea how much you can shorten a string by twisting? Thanks
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.

AllenR

Greg,

Hopefully someone will post the correct starting brace height for that bow.   I don't know it and that is key to tuning it.

First, be sure that the new string is not Fast Flight or one of the other newer fibers.  Use only Brownell's B-50 or BCY's B-500.  These two are made for the older bows and have the necessary "give".

The length of the string will be from 3" to 4" shorter than the length from nock to nock.  It will probably give you a brace height around 7 to 8 inches.  A new 66" bow that I got recently, required a 63" string to get brace height right.

Twisting will shorten the string significantly.  Usually you don't want start with more than 1 or 1 1/2 twists per inch of string, but when I was too lazy to build a new string, I've twisted up as much as 3/4".  That's probaly 5 or 6 twists per inch.  It worked, but not the best string I've ever had.

The B-50 and B-500 strings will stretch with use, so it's usually a little better to start with fewer twists, then add twists to keep your brace height adjusted.

Good luck with it,
Allen

Big Dave

You can twist it until it starts kinking
Live today like you'll meet God tommorow (you might)

Jeremy

Just to add to the confusion, I've had 3 50's Cubs on my bow rack at one point or another (2 now) and all three have been different lengths even though they were all marked 62"   :)    

The recommended brace on the old cubs was 6-1/2" to 7-1/4" (I think)  All three of mine seemed to like the 7-1/4" brace best.  Too much below that and they started getting pretty shocky (esp. the '57 Cub on my rack now).  I'll measure the strings on the bows when I get home tonight to give you a ball park number, but it should be around a 59" string.  Dacron is best measured under strain (on the bow or weighted with something heavy)
>>>-TGMM Family Of The Bow-->
CT CE/FS Chief Instructor
"Death is not the greatest loss in life.  The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live." - Norman Cousins

Greg Owen

Thanks for all the answers. This is a great place to learn. But I guess string length really doesn't matter until I get a bow stringer and some arrows.  Thanks again
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.

Greg Owen

Ok, I found a string. Now another question. How long does it take for an older Dacron string to stretch and to be ready to tune the system?
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.

bentpole

Gotta get Golden Hawk in here [LeRoy].He just built a b-50 for Gator1's old Bear Bow.

Golden Hawk

I'd give it a good 200 shots to be set in. JMHO
LeRoy

Charter member of TBJA (Trad Bow Junkies of America)

Greg Owen

Ok at the rate I am shooting, that will be about 10 years.  Thanks for the replies. Next time the weather and daylight cooperate I will get started. Soon days will get longer. These days with only 8 hours of daylight can get to a person.
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.


Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement
Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©