I just completed my first sinew backed bow and I was very impressed how it turned out. For my first attempt I backed a 20" hornbeam bow I made for my brothers new baby. I was not planning to back the bow, but after many hours of thinning the limbs and tillering (not that he was going shoot the bow at 2 months old), a limb cracked...hence the sinew backing exercise.
I spent several hours pounding and separating two hanks of sinew into ~30 little bundles (~15 bundles per hank). I sorted then hydrated each of the bundles for a couple minutes in water before saturating in glue (I cheated and used Tight Bond II). When I finished backing the bow I ended up with a couple of extra bundles that had been hydrated in water.
Question #1 - is there a "bigger-better" way to process the sinew hanks other than pounding with a wooden hammer on a rock? I'm okay with this method but it is very time consuming.
Question #2 - after I had glued a bundle of sinew to the back of the bow, I used an antler to "smooth" the bundle...after several bundles were glued to the back of the bow, I ended up lifting strands on the ends/edges of some bundles when I attempted to "smooth". The bundles were placed side by side like bricks in a wall. Any suggestions to “smooth” the bundles with lifting strands on adjacent bundles...maybe carefully use my finger and wrap the bow in an ace bandage (I read that somewhere)?
Question #3 - I would like to try backing one of my osage bows next. When I processed the sinew hanks, the fibers were placed in a large pile before I sorted/sized them into bundles...I would imagine that the processed sinew pile would getting tangled if I stored it in a bag until I processed enough to back a bow. As I wrote above, I had a few bundles of sinew left after my first backing project. I took the bundles out of the water to dry...now they are dry and very manageable. Can these dried bundles be rehydrated without any negative effects?
Question #4 – I tried really hard to keep the sinew off the sides of the bow. Next time, can I be less careful and remove the cured sinew from the sides of the bow with sand paper?
Question #5 – when I back my next bow, should I have it tillered 100% prior to backing and then re-tiller after it is backed?
Question #6 – if I re-tiller the bow after it has been backed, I would need to be very careful applying a finish to the belly of the bow so it didn’t get on the sinew…any suggestions?
Thanks for any help! I have a copy of Traditional Bowyers Bible that I have been using a reference. Can you suggest any other books/web sites I can use for reference?
Dino