Hi Folks, I've been working on a west coast inspired bow lately. I haven't gotten to the point of wrapping the bent tab nocks yet. It's cool that this discussion came up just in time for me to make use of the info.
Ron
After two practice runs on my "practice" mock-up bow tip, I wrapped my tips this weekend. I found it to be frustrating, time consuming and awkward. However, I'm very pleased with the results and will be able to wrap additional tips with confidence and a lot more speed next time. A few things I discovered along the way...that may or may not help you:
-after pulling the rawhide from the warm water, I wiped the excess water off with a towel and let air dry a few minutes before working. Otherwise, the excess moisture made things slippery and difficult to manipulate. If the rawhide got too dry and stiff to work, I'd just re-soak for 15 minutes or so.
-I used real hide glue which at first, was the same consistency as I used to back the bow. This seemed too runny allowing things to slip around too much. So, what I ended up doing was letting my glue gel and when ready for it, dipped my finger in water then rubbed it on the glue gel then applied that where needed. I should also note that I had wrapped my tips with sinew prior. So, when the moist rawhide was being manipulated around the tip, before I had applied any additional glue, it was picking up some of the hide glue and causing it stick slightly which seemed to add a little grip.
-the thin rawhide can be stretched a bit which was the part I couldn't envision....the process which gets the rawhide around the curves of the nock without wrinkles. Stretching, holding, more stretching, some choice words and lots of manipulation is the only way I can describe it.
-the real key for me was the practice tip. For ease of carving, I made it out some cedar 1x fencing I had in the scrap wood pile. It looks very much like the tip of my bow and is about 6" long. Took me about 15-30 minutes to make.
Good luck and thanks Yew Archer and the others for the help.