OK, so in the Autumn, once I've tidied away my next couple of projects, I'm starting a composite crossbow; I've already done a lot of prep work on the horn and read everything I can find. There are two basic types, all horn and sinew like a sheep-horn bow, and, wood/horn/sinew, either as wood-horn-sinew or horn-wood-sinew. What are the advantages of each approach? As I see it, a horn/wood/sinew composite should be the most efficient and also the most difficult to tiller and the most susceptible to breakage - apparently the wood core was a known weakness and broken and repaired examples are known of. The wood/horn/sinew bow would not use the horn very effectively but would be easy to tiller and repair. The last hurrah of the composite bow was the horn and sinew bow, short, drawn to tight radius curves and immensely powerful but I have absolutely zero experience of horn/sinew bow other than what I've read on these pages. Any comments would be very welcome.