| OL - I checked out your website. I was very impressed by your limb design. One of the hallmarks of a good design is that it seems simple enough that you look at it and think it should have been thought up years ago. With 'and' in mind it makes me wonder how something like a Hoyt Trykon, specifically the split limbs would behave if the design of limbs was combined with yours, plus the power of cams. I'm not saying cams make everything better, just what happens when this 'and' that are put together?
Admittedly, most of this postulating was brought on by a read through of the BowyersJournal.com design contest rules. I scribbled out a drawing and some specs that sound nice. Having never made a laminated bow, I haven't the faintest clue if any of it would actually work. I'm certain that I'd get a bow that shoots, but with who knows what qualities.
That being said, I was also wondering how the ACS technique would work in two other modified versions. 1) would natural lamination materials tolerate an ACS formation? The BJ contest rules state natural materials. 2) If one were to start with a small enough limb of a suitable tree, such as osage, how would it perform if, after carving the back down to one growth ring, the belly was carved down to one single ring too? Keep in mind that on a sufficiently small tree limb, 6" diameter or less one single growth ring on the belly should generate a natural imitation of the ACS design.
-JeD |