You are correct pat that has been the case for me as well. I dont pull it all the way just till it is real tight. I like the iidea of the chewing. Hey let me show you what I have been worling on here. I am combining the post so that it looks like this draft. The synthetic stuff is not put in yet. Just a draft!
How to Tie and Arrowhead
This document was created to demonstrate some common techniques used for tying on arrowheads. I tried to include ideas from every post and appreciate everyone’s help on this project. If I did not give you credit please let me know. I tried to arrange the information in the following way:
1. History/Purpose
2. Function
3. Materials
Pine pitch/ different formulas
Sinew/synthetic
a. Traditional
b. Primitive
4. Techniques
a. Traditional
b. Primitive
5. Spinning
1. History/Purpose
One purpose of the arrowhead is to provide a way to put a hole into the target and cause bleeding and/or puncture trauma. It only needs to work once, in this case. Eventually, the archer gets to know what the minimum amount of wrapping/glue will allow the arrowhead to do its business.
Also, there are descriptions in the old literature from the frontier that some arrowheads were tied on so that they would become loose in the wound and remain inside the wound or make it very painful to remove. Some arrowheads have only one notch on one side, for example. It was said that this made the arrowhead "turn" inside the wound if the arrow was pulled and caused "extra" misery to one's enemy. So, there are sometimes reasons for an arrowhead to be "imperfectly" attached. (Jackcrafy)
****I need input on this
Can you think of other objectives?
Objective 1. Point remains in the target: benefit could be, the shaft could be recovered and arrowhead could continue to do damage and would be difficult to remove
Objective 2. Point remains attached : Benefit could be, the arrow keeps the wound open so the animal continues to bleed making tracking easier.
I have seen deer bite an arrow and remove the arrow with its teeth so is it better that the arrowhead come out with the shaft? What if it was a bad hit?
2. Function
I can identify 3 functions of the sinew 1: hold the very tip of the wood together in the even that the shoulder of the pine pitch breaks this keep the wood from separating at the tip of the wooden part of the arrow. 2: warps of sinew around the notches in the arrowhead that continue to the shaft then hold the arrowhead on in the shaft (because if only warped at the tip then the arrowhead could separate from the shaft), 3: warps of a 1/2 inch on the shaft prevent the arrowhead from splitting the halving due to impact. (Iowabow)
3. Materials
Shaft halving
Photo here
These were my hunting arrows for this year. When I haft stone I make a single saw cut in the end of the shaft to the depth I want it then open the slot to fit each point individually because each stone point is different. I use a thin bladed knife and sand paper folded over and over until the point is fitted into the slot.
Pine pitch/ different formulas
My pitch glue is pine pitch, bees wax and finely ground charcoal and my pitch varnish is pitch dissolved in denatured alcohol. (Pat B)
I add the bees wax to pitch glue to make it less brittle. The ground charcoal adds body. You can use bear or deer fat instead of the bees wax and dried deer and rabbit dung or sawdust instead of the charcoal. (Pat B)
Charcoal and milkweed fibers(as are dried deer or rabbit dung and saw dust) are there for the same reason; to add body to the mix. The bees wax(bear or deer fat, etc) make the pitch glue less brittle by softening it a bit.
I have never measured my mixtures. It is probably 2 parts pitch and one part each of wax and charcoal. Someone, maybe Rich, mentioned one time about different temperatures (local) would have a different mix. For colder climates you might use one mixture and for hotter climates another. My mixtures are never made all at one time. I will first melt the pitch and add a little bees wax, let it cool and test it. If not right heat it again and add a bit more until it "feels" right to me. When that mixture seems correct I begin adding the charcoal (or other body building ingredient) until I like the way it feels.
When I make pitch glue and pitch varnish I start with hard brittle pitch and not sticky pitch. The volatile oils should have evaporated first. If I start with sticky pitch I cook it until these oils have evaporated; another trial and error. If you make your mixture with sticky pitch your glue or varnish will be sticky when it has cured.
Be very careful when cooking pitch because it is very volatile and WILL combust if overheated. This can be very dangerous if precautions are not in place. (Pat B)
Sinew/Synthetic
a. Traditional
b. Primitive
4. Techniques
The style of the arrowhead also determines how it will be attached. Sinew by itself works OK. Glue by itself works better than sinew. But the combination of glue and sinew works GREAT. This idea combines both the traditional and the primitive.
here is a link to a great post on techniques:
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,27472.msg367186.html#msg367186a. Traditional
I have also used TBIII, Duco cement and super glue to seal sinew wraps. (Pat B)
b. Primitive
I use real sinew and that works a whole lot better in my opinion than synthetic. The neat thing about real sinew is as it dries it shrinks tightening everything up nicely. I use real sinew now to wrap my nocks and feathers also. (Jon)
I have tried artificial sinew and it will work in a pinch but real sinew is much better in my opinion. If you don't mind chewing sinew the results are even better than soaking it. I use back strap sinew for this, I am sure any would work but back strap is longer on white tail than the leg and that is all I have access to on a regular bases. I then seal over it, after it is good and dry, with tru oil and you are good to go. No fretting. (Pappy)
I chew the sinew to get it soft. While I'm making the first wrap I'm chewing the second one. When the wrapping is done I lick my fingers and squeeze as I go around the wrap. The sinew and saliva makes its own glue so no other glue or tying is needed. When it is completely dry I seal the wrap with pine varnish. (Pat B)
5. Spinning
I then drip hot pitch glue into the slot, warm the point and press it into place . At this time I spin test the arrow to be sure it spins true. If all goes well here I then chew a strand of back strap sinew until soft and make my wrap. I usually use 2 or 3 pieces of this long sinew to be sure the point is secure then wrap it up the shaft a bit.After the sinew is dry I spin the shaft again to ensure it still spins straight then seal it with pitch varnish. If the point ever becomes loose or out of whack I reheat the point slightly to let the pitch glue adhere to the point again.
Pat B