Here’s my list of backing attempts with some comments on my experiences.
1 - Red oak backed white ash. The oak over powers it a bit, but a long narrow bow with 2” of perry and youve got yourself a very sweet shooter that’ll take about an inch of set. This combo is a favorite because i can cut my stock to near finished dimensions based on experience and ash is a dream to scrape and tiller.
2 - Linen over about any anything but my most successful was over a wide white oak paddle bow with frighteningly narrow tips.
3 - Flax cord over HHB - good combo but kinda ugly. And it stacks firmly at about 29” of draw. The bow is 1 3/8” wide and 67” long at 46lbs. Like this combo.
4 - Raw Flax roving over Osage. It broke as the stave was knotty and had some bug damage. Raw
Flax is very strong and i use it more for wraps as it seems to overpower everything. One of the most interesting things i did with raw flax is to stiffen a bendy handle bamboo osage bamboo ALB. (As a side note i wrote here once that I used sinew for that but it was flax roving, i just looked at it the other day when my nephew was shooting it) It was bending too much in the handle so i laid down flax roving from fade to fade on top of the boo and wrapped the ends of the courses with roving. Worked out very well but pretty crude looking.
4 - Bamboo and Hickory. What can you say? Tried and true. Always with TB II or Elmer’s Max.
5 - Sinew with Tite Bond II or Elmer’s Max. I like these glues better than TB III for reasons i can’t explain. TB won’t magically pull a bow into reflex like hide glue but if you reverse string the bow while the glue is curing you won’t be able to tell the difference next to hide glue except by appearance and cure time. It still takes a week to 10 days to reach full potential. Once the reflex cures in i find it to be indistinguishable from hide glue and sinew as long as you reverse string the bow to cure. If you don’t it does not perform as well as hide glue.
6 - Rawhide - you can have it. It’s saved me from a cut face at least twice but i think it only prevents explosions. I don’t think it makes my bows any stronger or safer.
7 - Sinew over linen. Dumb idea; the linen never allowed the sinew to do its work. Linen over sinew might be cool but unecessary.
8 - I’m floor tillering a quarter sawn 3/16” red oak backing over a quartersawn Osage timber right now. Based on prior experience i have really high hopes for this one.
I’ve thought a fair bit about pulling strands of bamboo garden stake into fibers and treating them like sinew or roving but I’ve never tried it. One day i will.
I’m conjuring up a silk stretching jig to try a stressed silk back design but have not
Attmpted it yet.