This time I am making a latchet bow and have added a picture of the last one I made. Latchets bows are small lever action bows with the cocking lever built into the top of the stock and a top mounted trigger. I actually don't know that much about these but I believe that they were civil defence bows from the second half of the 16thC and were popular in the North of England and in the Borders.
I examined one about 7 years ago and made a fairly close reproduction at the time and now making another and as these are rather unusual and interesting pieces I thought I would share the process.
The inbuilt lever and top trigger means that it can shoot about every 8 seconds and be shot single handed and although the draw is quite short with 225lb it will still pack a punch. The bow is about 40cm wide and has a triangular cross section and rolled ends.
I started by making the nut and the sear train. I used a layout taken from an assasins bow which also uses a top trigger and I find a much easier system than the one fitted to this bow originally. The original system was very sensitive and it is tricky to get the balance right between hair trigger and impossibly hard, so I decided to use a different method.
When making a trigger the most common mistake is that the more load you put on the trigger, the stiffer it gets, so it in effect becomes self locking. This system doesn't suffer from this, but still has the great advantage of the more load you put through it, the more it locks, so it cannot slip, but crucially remains easy to trigger.
When the nut and sear train was made, I added roughed out side plates, drilled them and fitted them up to the roughed out lever. Once all the clearances worked and all the little interferences were dealt with, I brazed a spacer inbetween the plates and I polished the pieces up and started thinking about the string................
I hope you find the story interesting because there is more to come.
Tod











