I am no autrority on war bows but I have read many books on the subject.One thing that I find is rarely mentioned is how short the people were in the days of the long bow, around 5' 4" was considered a large man. A bow tillered for a 32" draw, which seems to be the norm, would have been impossible for the average man of the day to reach if he were to draw the bow . I am 6'-1 1/2" tall and I can barely reach 32" draw pulling to my ear. I have come to the conclusion that bows of the day were tillered to 32" for safety ,while in reality the bows were only drawn to around 26" to 28" max. If we were to make a bow to fit us and use ratio to proportion as a pattern. The bow would have to be tillered to 38" to 40" to be correct. There are other factors that come into play as well, things like reaching the point of diminishing returns and the bows averaging 72" in length.After doing the math it appears that the bows of the day were only pulled to about 65# draw on an average if that and not 90 to 100# as we have seen in print...... This is only an opinion!
One thing that I find is rarely mentioned is how short the people were in the days of the long bow, around 5' 4" was considered a large man.
- Not true. "People were shorter than us, back in medieval ages" its known and debunked misinformation. Average height oscilated alot over periods of good and bad nutritions e.g. even over a so short time as two or three generations. A free farmer with his heavy work, but good nutrition on both sacharide and protein was actually very well build and of todays "normal" height with off course some people being shorter and some higher. People had slightly different frame - e.g. the palms of hands were more than narrow, but generally "they were smaller than us" is hersay.
I am 6'-1 1/2" tall and I can barely reach 32" draw pulling to my ear
- I m only 5´3´´ and I can draw 31´´ unless I get too much of body compression with bow over 115# or so. You do something wrong.
I have come to the conclusion that bows of the day were tillered to 32" for safety ,while in reality the bows were only drawn to around 26" to 28" max
- Such bows would be extremelly sluggish. While there are some shorter arrows, these still allow for at least 28´´, but fully tilered english bow works indeed best at some 32´´. It starts to shoot reasonably at 30´´. 26´´ draw is just too short to store energy for these arrows. At 28´´ these bows just dont perform any satisfactory or in unity with a common performance they were required to reach.
There are other factors that come into play as well, things like reaching the point of diminishing returns and the bows averaging 72" in length
- Point of dimnishing return is reached at some 33´´ of drawlenght with english bows from yew. Past that you wont get much increase in distance reached.
MR bows averaged on 75-77´´. There is few (les then 10) which are actually shorter , but even these were in 74´´ range. 72´´ was probably standart in pre azincourt era, though we have no means to say for sure and again even 72´´ is easy to tiler at 32´´. For very heavy bows longer is better because the elastic limits of material is reached.
After doing the math it appears that the bows of the day were only pulled to about 65# draw on an average if that and not 90 to 100# as we have seen in print
-What math? Bad one apparently. I follow right away with side note on required performance of said bows.
J.