No problem with answering Jaro - I was talking to J.D that time because he asked a couple of excellent questions which merited a prompt reply. I don't actually have that much time to spend on this forum so my posts will likely appear at the same time of an evening.
Now what have we heard from you so far eh?
1) The warbow buying public are generally ignorant
2) You can get 100000 shots from a replica warbow without significant deterioration - yeah right.
3) You believe that a tudor bowyer working in a mass production environment [which had to be regulated in order to maintain standards (Hardy and Strickland p23) was more assiduous than the few modern bowyers making these bespoke articles for a living and providing a guarantee.
4)You have disparaged the work of Don Adams - who at least is a bowyer who has actually published work albeit a while ago
5) You took the bait on my Donald Rumsfeld comment which was an invitation for you to go for the man rather than the ball. I was just curious to see whether you'd bite thats all. For your information, I'm no fan of the neocons but I can see when even someone I don't like talks sense.
With regard to Occams Razor - my explanation to J.D of the sizes of the MR bows and why I think the poundages were what I believe they were is actually a model of Occams Razor in that it is consistent with all that is known about the MR bows as well as what is known about modern replicas and in particular, it requires no superlatives abilities of anybody or anything in the system - archers, wood, bows or bowyers. Above average yes, superlative no.
Why do I not quote my sources? Two reasons. Firstly, I'm not sure if you've noticed but I may as well point it out. You are unique in the extent and degree to which you quote sources on the site. Its your right, I have no problem with it, however it may also have escaped your notice that its an open forum for hobbyists, the merely curious, young people - basically everybody. It isn't a scientific forum and I for one have no desire or appetite to shove the extent of my learning or interest in this topic down everybodies throat. What I've said so far is verifiable with little effort apart from where its only my opinion (and that will be obvious to any discerning raeder) and I've left my e-mail address available to anybody who wants to get in touch. Having said all that, I'm prepared to make a couple of exceptions just for you and just this once.
Second reason is this. Warbow archery is a niche interest of a small field where I come from. There are people here who make a living out of it and others trying to make a living. I try to be sensitive to that fact and not antagonise or jeopardise those people by quoting them while they are still active - they can speak for themselves if they want to. At the same time, a forum like this is an interesting and useful exercise for exchange of information amongst people who are prepared to accept differences of opinion - but thats all they are, opinions.
To answer some of your points. Yes it was the Luttrell Psalter and so what if it was the 1340s? In 1365 Edward 111 issued the same sort of proclamations as you describe (Connections, pub James Burke, 1981 p 66). That just goes to show that nothing changed between tudor times and earlier medieval times. Nothing stupid there.
What materials were used in the Hardy experiment I refer to. Well, as you say, a fibreglass flatbow and longbow of oregon yew. Its a poor piece of scientific writing as the string isn't mentioned but you can bet it was man made fibre. I suppose the horn nocks were available to a tudor bowyer - so I'll give you that much. Oh yes the reference is Hardy and Strickland page 408. I should also say that the MR bow made by Roy King all those years ago only came out at 105lb and 1m87cm between the nocks. It was actually shorter (I'm told) than the bow upon which it was based - as a bowyer you'll know where this is going so I won't bore you with the details.
You seem to object to my suggestion that it is common for people to extol the virtues of the past at the expense of the modern age. Well, its hard to start with something so common and well known. I doubt you are a fan of cricket, but if you were, yesterday you would have heard Geoffrey Boycott suggesting that his mum armed with a stick of rhubarb could have defeated an English medium pace bowler. Thats the sort of hyperbole I'm talking about - maybe its not so common where you are from, buts its standard here. If you want references, check out the British Medical Press where you'll find people talking about how modern surgeons are trained on 9000 hours of surgery while my generation had to do 36000. All rubbish of course but its what people like to believe.
On your bit of Don Adams bow - well who broke it. This is my whole point after all.
What do you mean 'there was not often found more bows than archers'. The MR bows are the only find of note - there is no index with which to compare so you can't make any comment. And were the black bow and Agincourt really used - or were they just in a different condition? Either way, if they still did what they were meant to do, then why not bring them? The presence of only two used bows amongst 137 unused ones would indicate a short life - not a long one I remember reading of a fancy that Agincourt looked like an old timer but please tell me that nobody believes the thing was 130 years old when the ship went down.
My statement that the bows tended towards 80 inches should be taken thus. Your figures show that if you make a bar chart with bow length on the x axis and number of bows on the y axis, then you get a normal distribution with a skew to the right. If you accept that they were of similar weights, then the obvious inference is that the properties of the wood was very heterogenous - which supports my view that there was nothing uniformly superlative about the quality of the wood. Thats all I meant. Your insistence on precise analysis of individual bows stops you seeing whats right under your nose.
I'd love to experiment - but I'm a surgeon, not a bowyer - I'll leave it to the likes of Pip Bickerstaffe and others who as I have said is a good scientific thinker and has the access and ability to do that kind of work
Dunno where you get your ideas on Simon Stanley. Ask him what he thinks of Italian yew whenever you see him. Last time I saw him(and I've met him only twice) he was using a laminate Osage/yew and I think hickory backed bow.
What athletics? What records on flight shooting where the break wasn't due to advances in materials?
C