if you have a sinew bow that's reflexed say 4 in. & when you bring it to brace is the belly under more compretion then a standard brace at that point ?
the belly of the sinewed reflexed bow would be under less compression than an unsinewed reflexed bow, because with all other things being equal, the sinew will stretch before most woods will compress.
if you are comparing a reflexed sinewed bow to a unreflexed self (no sinew) bow, than the degree of compression would depend on the amount and strength of the sinew and the relative strength of the wood it is applied to.
I think Mo cooncatcher describes the properties of sinew well, as sinew is often used to its best advantage with low compression strong wood. Work or energy stored in the limb is a result of materiel actually moving (and returning to shape).
My anwser to Pats riddle is, One can build a bow from sinew and something very stiff, but essentially, it would be a sinew bow. As the sinew would be doing most of the work, the overly stiff belly would not contribute much to the energy storage. I think that the wide thin yew would shoot further, but I might be proven wrong.
I have to disagree a bit with.....
Sinew won't help the belly at all. The only way it could is if you make your bow thinner
as I believe that the application of a backing like sinew
does makes the compression side of the bow thinner, by lowering the level in the core that neither stretching nor compression takes place. Correspondingly, the tension side increases in thickness, and the overall thickness does not change all that much.