My thoughts on sinew are just that....My thoughts
so a grain of sand may be required here.
Once the sinew is, like Lenny said,initially dry and clear, then the curing process for the most part is over. It will contiue to cure but for how long? With humidity levels up and down? Any post drying then, only comes from the wood that has obsorbed moisture from the wet sinew/glue. Induced heating (drying box/hot car) reduces the moisture just like drying un seasoned wood.
I for one, would rather keep a fresh sinewed bow in a climate controlled area via air conditioned room/de humidifier, where moisture is removed, for a couple weeks, then maybe some low temp hot box for the wood itself.I figure a few days in that and one should be good to go? I've read where the natives would hang bows up in the top of tepees and let the smoke and heat from the lodge fire cure it. Was this for the sinew or the wood itself?
JMI.