[/quote] I read some comment that bursh nock act like lever so early d/f curve is steep(3-4 pound per inch) and end of draw is gradual(1-2pound per inch)? is it true? I think this is effect of recurve(siyah) not brush nock..
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Yes, a recurve would do this better, and I have not made brush-nock bows before, but I think I can explain this. I sometimes make recurved or reflex bows with a small "string bridge" on the upper limb. It is like at the "knee" of a bow with a siyah, usually there is a small pad or built-up spot of leather or something else, to help center and pad the string. So, for example, let us say I built a recurve bow of wood. I don't want to make a groove down the recurve for the string to rest in. Instead, I take a small bamboo piece, 3.5 cm long X 1.5 cm diameter, and tie this to the limb, perhaps 12 cm from the tip, on the belly of the recurve. I cut a small groove in that for the string to rest. So, when I string the bow, the string now rests in that groove and the bamboo is crosswise under the string.
The bamboo holds the string away from the bow slightly, and makes the string very tight while braced. When you pull back the bowstring, this little bridge makes the bow act like the recurve is even more than it is, until the string lifts off the bridge as the limb bends back.
A brush-nock on a static recurve creates the same effect.