Back in June I started a project for making a sinew cable for a second arctic cable-backed bow. My first arctic cable-backed bow was made with nylon cable and local woods from Missouri.
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,30234.0.html That was an experiment.
I want this second cable bow to be made with more authentic materials than my first cable-backed bow. This means the cable and wood choices have to change.
So I started with the double strand, reverse twist cable. Here are the final stats:
*I used about 25 white-tail deer tendons.
*I pounded tendons for a combined 3 hours.
*I shredded and separated sinew strips for roughly 7 hours.
*making cord took 13.5 hours and went at a rate of roughly 7.5 feet per hour.
*trimming the cable took 1.5 hours.
I did not process all of the deer tendons from the legs. I processed about 10, the rest came from Patches (you have my gratitude Patches!). Cutting out tendons takes time too. The 10 I did amounted to roughly 30 minutes of labor. At that rate Patches likely spent an additional hour cutting tendons free from legs.
So the grand total of time invested in making this cable is a whopping
26.5 hours.
The cable reached 102 feet and five inches before I concluded last night!
Pics below show the cable before and after trimming, the full cable looped up, and the final image is of the cable stretched out down a driveway.
The bow I make will have less than 8 hours in it, so the cable is by and far the largest investment.
I am SO very pleased with this. Thanks for looking guys. Forgive me but I am proud.