Yes, each bow teaches you something. I can say from experience that you should never sinew back a bow that looks like it will fail. Take your bow past getting a string on it at brace and get the limbs bending a little before you sinew back. If you discover a problem up to that point, start a new bow. If all looks good, do any recurving or other bending with heat you need/want to do and then sinew back. Depending on the humidity, let the sinew dry 2-4 weeks for 2 layers, more if you've done a heavier sinew backing. Finish your tillering and shoot your bow. Don't put a finish or covering on the sinew until you've shot it quite a bit. If you get a failure at that point you can soak the sinew off and reuse it. Once it has a finish applied (unless you use snakeskin with hide glue) it will probably not be possible to reuse the sinew.
JW, up north I had a terrible time with mice getting into my dried deer tendons. When we moved out and packed up the basement I found tendons everywhere they had drug off. I think all animals that like to chew go after sinew. I'm sure I lost tendons when the mice drug them down to where the dog could reach them. They were chew toys to her. I learned to really dislike mice.
Keep after it hook, it'll work.
George