heres my bit of information to add
tudor war arrows were over spined.
made of ash poplar beech and hazel. and 1/2" diameter
length debateable
piles points / warheads were of hand forged steel.
fletchings were goose or swan. 7.5" - 8.5" inch long
arrows were spiral whipped with linen and covered with (something= copper and tar i think, but i think im wrong, maybe someone can correct me on that) (to stop the rats eating the fletchings during storage ?)
and arrows were nocked with horn. and no deeper than 1/4" and 1/8" wide for the string, tapered to 3/8" at the nock from 1/2" from the pile.
Ratty, I hope you don't mind but I've broken your points down.
1. Over-spined? Perhaps for the vicarage lawn, not for war. Light arrows mean poor penetration.
2. Add birch and oak at least. Fletchers seemed to use a wide variety of hardwoods. Also there is good documentary evidence of coppiced shafts as well as split.
3. Well iron and steel, really.
4. Peacock too maybe? As to the length I’m a bit confused, Dr. Margaret Rule state s the average MR fletch was 6”, but as you mention I seen it written as longer. The low triangular shape seems the most commonly represented but that does not mean it was the only cut used.
5. Maybe silk as well, and were all war arrows whipped? As to the seating compound on MR arrows I’m also confused. Al has tried to simulate this compound using this mix… (ish)
1 part boiled linseed oil
3 parts Dammar resin
1 part pure turpentine
0.5 parts ground verdigris
3 parts bees wax
It works well but takes a while to dry. However, what was it for? Surely mites would still attack the feathers, that were not coated and the arrows were stored in a chest. Wouldn’t this deter the furry pests? It must have been there for a reason. Perhaps to moisture proof the animal glue to hold the fletches down?
6. Were all war arrows cross-nocked/horn or bone reinforced? If soo why are they specifically requested in orders.
Hmmm, interesting tread.
J