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11
Bows / Re: 150# recurve
« Last post by RyanY on February 22, 2026, 07:07:09 pm »
What a beast! Looks so similar to the bows you make in that style. How long was it and how wide were the limbs?
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Bows / Re: 150# recurve
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:39:13 pm »
Very nice work Marc, glad I don't have to do the testing and shooting it in though. :) :)
 Pappy
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Primitive Skills / Re: Life is good
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:15:31 pm »
Had a good meeting Saturday with most of the guys showing up, and then went out and cut more wood, we figure we have about 12 cords, just need a few more piles in the camping areas and we should be set for the Classic and the year. Hope yall had a good one also. Life is Good. :)
 Pappy
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Primitive Skills / Re: Life is good
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:12:44 pm »
Good fire and beautiful crescent moon with good friends, hard to beat. Will doing some napping for the trophies at the Classic, 1ST place gets an arrow on the plaque with napped head, second a trade point and 3rd a field point.  :) A buddy of mine brought me some Turkey legs, more project material. :) :)
 Pappy
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Primitive Skills / Re: Life is good
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:09:11 pm »
Made some venison steaks and chili for the boys and of course they brought some of their stuff so we are very good. :)
 Pappy
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Primitive Skills / Re: Life is good
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:07:02 pm »
I got the arrows and feathers started for the Classic awards, made a little head way on that but mostly concentrated on our wood pile.  :)
 Pappy
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Primitive Skills / Re: Life is good
« Last post by Pappy on February 22, 2026, 06:04:12 pm »
Thanks Guys, got surgery next Tuesday, he said it was kind of a mess with tears/arthritis and some old stuff from the pasted I didn't even know about  ??? but he felt pretty good about fixing it, so we will see. Had a good weekend and had a great time visiting with Rocky and Frits, them guys are a hoot.  :) Got a few things done around the shop but we were mostly in wood cutting mode and got a bunch done. I was tractor man most of the time but did use the saw when my buddies weren't watching me.  ;) :) Shaw showed up and got all his billets and stave sealed and ready for the barn. Lot of good wood in a year or 2. :)
 Pappy
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Bows / Re: 150# recurve
« Last post by superdav95 on February 22, 2026, 05:21:24 pm »
Ya that’s crazy nice.  Not that I could shoot it either but it looks very well made for certain.  A special stringer is a must to get this beast strung up.  Looks like a great bow for flight record maybe.  Good to see your bows here. 
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Bows / Re: 48" osage shorty bendy handle recurve build
« Last post by superdav95 on February 22, 2026, 05:14:24 pm »
I read through some of that’s stuff on sinew and chew vs hide glue.  The twisted sinew cable bow is also very cool.


knowing you are an experimental and questioning kind of guy, I would ask....

do you have any ideas about how much sinew should stretch in order to add the most benifit?

or asked another way, how high or far away from the belly is optimal?

Great question.  Preamble… I make these statements and claims purely based on my own experiences.  FWIW. 

BowEd and myself have discussed this topic together quite a bit.   How much sinew??? A general rule a thumb has been and continues to be 1/3 overall thickness in the case of a tri lam of sorts for the lack of a better term.  1/3 sinew thickness: 1/3 wood core: 1/3 horn for example.  This ratio works really well for a belly laminated bow with horn having wood as the core.  In other examples that are just 2 laminated sections like wood core only with sinew then this would depend on how heavy you want your bow to be I suppose.  Like any sturdy backing added to an existing bow it moves the neutral plane further towards the belly.  The neutral plane is generally in the middle of the bow limb but this can be manipulated with laminate backings or sinew or linen even on the back.  The same can be true with adding a belly laminate that acts as an increase in compression to move this neutral plane more towards the back.  Tension side failures are easy to spot and are often hard to miss with a lift or a violent break.  Compression is where the set is less obvious in the same way that tension failures are.  They can sneak up on us and show up as stress marks and crushed wood fibers.  Sinew added to a bow with no belly laminate I generally aim for 1/8” thickness.  This obviously varies a bit depending on the width of the limbs and where along the limb I’m measuring.  For example I will taper the thickness of sinew out towards the tips to keep mass light in those areas of the bow for better cast.  I’ll thicken it up on bending portions.  For reference the little Osage 48” bendy bow recurve I just sinewed last week I only added 50grams.  This may seem like very little sinew and may seem like it will make no difference perhaps.  My draw weight prior to sinew was 48lbs at 26”.  My goal and likely outcome with strategically placing sinew with the least amount of glue as safely as I can hopefully get 55-60lbs at 28” safely.  So the little added mass added with the sinew I estimate will get me there.  If this was a bow with a violated back or decrowned for example then 50grams would not be enough imo.   In the case of an already well tilled and shooting bow that the builder has maintained good build principles and not violated the outer ring then less is more to a point.  If the builder is merely looking for extra draw length with a margin of extra safety then it’s a good option.  I’ve built self bows in the past and backed with heavy layers of sinew and glue only to find it was slower then before.  Stability is another issue that gets overlooked.  I built a bow for a member here with out mentioning him by name where the bow had more sinew then the core would could control.  This particular bow build was a white wood bow and the target draw weight was too high or over estimated so I proceeded to scrape the belly to reduce weight.  In so doing the wood was about half the overall thickness of the bow with the sinew and the wood could not control it and became unstable.  Constantly needed correction and tweaking for balancing the limbs.  I then decided to add a thin belly lam of horn and it turned out great and moved that neutral plane where it was more stable.  So my advise to anyone wishing to add sinew to an already well behaved shooting bow that they just want a little more out of as far as weight and length of draw aim for approx 1/3 of overall thickness for a standard 1-1/2-1-3/4” wide limb out the fades.  On some wide limbed paddle bows or the like really the same sort of principle applies but it’s gets tricky to determine on some of those as far as thickness is concerned as there often more tapers and narrowing sections where no sinew may be needed at all.  For these measured bundles of wide strips of sinew bundles I find work well on the working part of the limbs.  As a rule of thumb on a hunting bow for example say 45-50lbs of standard flat bow or pyramid style 1/8” thickness of dried sinew layer is a good baseline.  The great thing about sinew is that if you screw it up you can always redo it sand it scrape it or add another layer to get it right.  You can’t really do this with any other backing.  So to sum up,  an all sinew bow doesn’t work for a reason because it’s not stable so putting the neutral plain somewhere within the wood portion of the limb is best for stability and balance.  The sinew will enhance the wood adding to it.    These are my opinions from my own experiences and experiments (so called)and from the input of many others along the way.  I learned from Ed and others like Arvin here the importance of taking measurements and keeping notes to assist with the best build.  I hope this somewhat answers your question Willie!   
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Bows / Re: 150# recurve
« Last post by bjrogg on February 22, 2026, 05:00:38 pm »
Thanks for sharing Marc. Your bends always look perfect. I would love to have one of your bows , but not that one.lol  I’m sure that was a struggle to get to first brace. And second, third, ect.

Really good to see your work again. Always gives me something to aim for.

Bjrogg
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