WILLIE: I see bamboo fiber on the yarn market. Perhaps suitable for bow designs that would be difficult with a bamboo slat?
DC: "I did a little investigating(not much) a while back and what I found says that the bamboo fiber is more like a rayon making process. It didn't seem to be actual fibers from the boo. I may be wrong.
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I looked into this, too, and that's what I found. Even read some of the patents. Not exactly the same, but heavily dependent on chemical baths to extract the fiber. Once I laid hand on some, it wasn't as strong as quality hemp or flax.
PatM: "Before people got into reverse bracing, sinew backing was well known to cause long term reflex acquisition."
Correct. Sinew, and to a much lesser extent, rawhide, are very unlike any wood, bamboo, linen, or hemp backing, simply because they stretch much more. And, sinew both induces and holds reflex. It is known.
PatM: Extracted plant fibers are actually heavy. Also within a glue matrix they are really hard to glue so that they do not move and slip within the matrix.
Sinew is heavier per strength, but is SO much more elastic. I agree veg fibers don't seem to "take" to a matrix as well as sinew and hide glue. Bows backed with linen fabric for instance seem to take a LOT of glue to me.