i am not saying that sinew backing a long bow is a great idea as what that means to most people is to put a long backing of sinew down. if it is on the working limbs, which dont happen to be real long, it would be the same as sinew backing a short bow with extra weight on the tips. an unviolated back is important-but only where there is actual work being done. i dont see any reason that this shouldnt work. if the degree to which you pull the bow into reflex is the same as on a shorter bow, the efficiency increase should be the same, the weight of the sinew is near the handle where it hardly moves, and so that may not be a horrible bow to shoot at all.
adb-if you have thick enough tips that they dont bend at all-or a thick, built up handle, you can cut through the back ring and it wont hurt the integrity of the bow. that is if that area isnt doing bending work. an unviolated ring or solid backing material is important when the material is bent so that the backing strips do not peel away from the inner core. in practice, that is not a great idea either as you may have leverage at the handle area that would still pull if off, maybe. but if the strong area runs halfway into the handle you should be ok with a violation there. you could leave an extra few rings on the back in a built up handle to build it up on the back of the bow instead of the belly-in a backwards fashion-and that should be fine if done carefully. so with the sinew just make sure that at the transition from sinew to outer limb you have secured the backing well to the limb and it should be ok.
sailordad-yeah, that is pretty much what we were saying. a holmegaard is a good basic design to use when thinking of this, but i didnt want to get locked into that specifically. the holmegaard has already got safety features in place to keep it together adn to make it efficient, even though it is similar in many ways to just another short bow. this could be done with a longbow tillered to look like a holmegaard, for instance.
M-P-a good point. wood/situation depending, sinew may help more than it hurts too. SOM