Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: E. Jensen on February 02, 2015, 01:07:26 pm
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Recently I've seen a PVC bow called a "norse bow", a laminate recurve called a "longbow", the same bow also called a "plains bow", my pyramid board flat bow has been called a "longbow", bamboo backed hickory called a "selfbow" and on and on and on. Is there any method to this madness?
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I only use distinctions when trying to do a historical replication. It matters a lot to some to some not much.
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And I mean how long does a bow have to be to be a longbow? I made an "english long bow" yew bow with horn nocks, but its 63". 63" isnt what I'd call long, even though it is ELB style
???
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Bows used to be designated either longbows or recurves. I guess any bow that has straight tips would be considered a longbow. If the string touches the limb below the string nock it would be considered a recurve.
A bamboo backed anything would be a backed bow but it can be a longbow or recurve. An ELB style longbow would be longer but a shorter version would still be considered a long bow, just not an ELB.