Erik
The one I quoted is of course a longbow, as is the Roi Modus recipe which are examples of bow length instructions whose existence you questioned. The smallbow dimensions are in Le Livre de Chasse.
While I said that I do not have English Translations of these I do actually have or have access to copies both in old French and with modern French transcripts, now as you say you have taken notes then please share the information in your notes I would like to find the exact excerpts that take of small bows/short bows and how to make them.
You don’t have to measure your hand. You grasp one end of your shaft blank , press your other fist down on it, and continue til 10 fists { for longbow arrows]
But only if one has access to a suitably long shaft to do these 10 fists upon.
I have now got such a shaft from my garage/shed and the news is not good for your proclaimed method, the result is that my 10 fists produce an a length of 38 7/16 inches, and before you ask I made sure my thumb had nothing to do with the measurement pressing the lower part of each fist, that bit nearest to the little finger down on the area formed by my index finger.
This by Sexmodus' method my bow should be a minimum of 76 7/8 inches which is way above my head. As an aside I tried the system on a tall colleague, the results were such that the required bow was only slightly shorter that his height. So I would suggest that the method does not work, although the twice arrow length plus something is a pretty standard method employed by most bowyers.
A longbow is a bow that is long, long enough to take an arrow at least long enough to draw to the ear. Any disagreement ?
Yes actually, a longbow ids a bow that is long not short, which means that my bows that are designed for 28 inch arrows are longbows, although they are shorter bow that those designed to shoot 32inch arrows, I also do
not subscribe to the British claim that the bow has to be of a certain shape and that flatbows are not longbows.
RE heat bending, if you know any other way to put a desired bend into a bow, please inform me
Erik, the point was not the method which we know works but your statement as to that was the way they were made, once again you use absolutes when they are only assumptions. Or can you infact actually point to directions that tell you how to bend wood to form your claimed short bows or any other bow?
That aside there are other methods of achieving the desired shape:
1, Grow the wood to that shape by using forms on the live tree,
2, Select naturally bent shapes;
3, Bend over forms while green and allow to dry and season whilst bent to shape;
4, laminate the wood gluing the shape in as one goes, animal glues are eminently suitable for this, it is after all what the Eastern bowyers did and do with their bows.
Craig.