a warbow is a SELFBOW.
ever shot or drawn a warbow? You're very welcome to draw my bows, if you can, you may deny my bows arent warbows
110# BBI in the work, so it will be a challenge for you to deny
I'm sure people have used rawhide for backings in the medievals, but the've rotten away for sure. what's the true difference between a 3mm thick strip of rawhide and boo?
what's the true difference between ipe and yew/elm/ash? then what's the difference between a rawhide backed yew and BBI? and if you take the rawhide off, what's the difference then?
I don't think there's any answere here, it's a agreement we make. it's about setting limits.
this is what I'd agree with as a warbow definition:
thickest, widest part at handle
drawweight of over 80 #
compass tiller
drawn to the ear, or almost.
all-wood, exept from horn nocks, and arrowpass. (no glass, or carbon...)
no cut in shelves
the term 'longbow' was used to show the difference between crossbow and a normal bow. another similar definition would be hand(drawn) bow. It didn't have to do anything with the design or length. later, term crossbow came
IMHO a heavy laminated longbow is just that, a heavy laminated longbow.
Nothing wrong with that.
As to what poundage makes a "warbow", it seems likely that an arms race took place where the beginnings would have been with useful hunting weights and escalated from there in response to the tactical demands of the situation.
Heavy weights will have been current for as long as defensibly dressed men have been shooting arrows at each other and even before that when they were just trying to outrange each other on open ground with shafts of increasing weight.
Rod.
I totally agree
Quote from: triton on March 03, 2009, 10:40:00 AM
If you couldn't draw the bows issued, an average of 140LB, you didn't make muster and stayed home with your mum.
Or at least given a pointy stick and called infantry.how lovely
Nick