Great advice, Hermit. Thank you. I think making a self bow, sinew backed, is good first step.
The one glitch is that both osage and hickory were unavailable to the Greeks. The woods they would have used would have been fir, maple, alder, birch,box, hornbeam, chestnut, cedar, sanderac, cornel / dogwood, hazel, cypress, beech, fig, ash, ebony, holm oak, walnut, juniper, larch, olive, palm, pine, poplar, oak, willow, yew, terebinth, linden, and elm. Hickory I think would be best, and I think I have enough of that in stave form.
Jude, yes, the limit to the draw weight, I think, would have been how much a single man could span the machine with his body. As the weapons evolved, mechanical means were developed to allow a crew to draw back the bow, and then the arms in the torsion machines.
Does anyone know about ancient Greek bow design? I have not read or heard anything about that. Enemies of the Greeks would have used composite designs, though, so they would have been familiar with them.
Dane