So, I'm working on a recurved pyramid sort of bow. Yesterday I backed it with sinew. I reverse-braced the bow to 7", applied the sinew, and then wrapped and heated the backing to get excess glue out of it (á la Pat M's method).
Now that the sinew has been drying for a day, I discover that the previously perfectly flat belly has become concave. The opposite of crowned, that is. I've never had this happen to me before, but then I've never used deer sinew before, only cow sinew. Deer sinew seems to expand much more when soaked and should therefore, logically, result in more reflex as the sinew pulls the bow more than cow sinew does. But even if that is the case, I can't quite wrap my head around what's going on. Any ideas? Similar experiences? Is it fatal?
BTW, the back of the bow pre-backing was crowned. The stave came from a 6" trunk. The wood is rowan, well seasoned.