disbelief that trained archers were shooting well over 120lb
Which is not what I said at all. I wrote "Nope, I figure most bowmen of the day could handle a LB with 80 lb pull all day long, but only the biggest and strongest could effectively use bows of 100-120 pounds and a rare few could handle the very rare bows of over 120 to 160 pounds.
Bows of 80-100 lb were suited to the common levies while anything heavier were for use of the fittest and most experienced professionals."
You had no problem with at least partly understanding what I wrote when you posted
the comment that not all bowmen could shoot 120lb is probably slightly unlikely
You wrote
I haven't mentioned any recreations other than my own which have always been in English yew, and the Weapons of Warre copies which were American yew.
Yet earlier you wrote.
Current research and experiments puts the AVERAGE MR bow weight at 150lb. Many replicas (and I mean identical replicas down to the perfect dimension) have been made of specific MR bows that are well over that, some going into the 190lb ranges.
In August of 2019 you claimed the Weapons of Warre measurements were not correct.
especially considering I think Italian yew is just an overhyped brand name attempting to lure beginner bowyers into spending hundreds of pounds on a piece of wood.
Yet Henry 8th contracted at great expense for Italian Yew and such staves fetched nearly three times the price of English Yew staves. English yew of the day was stated to be inferior.
Yew was also imported from Austria, Poland, and Spain among other sources. Careless over Harvesting resulted in dying off of some forests.
shorter skeletons,
Well perhaps O'Swami you can tell us exactly how many of the Lancastrian troops found in mass graves at Towton were no more than five feet tall? Were any over six feet tall?
Since by law no one under 16 was required to own and practice with the bow and some of the skeletons found were of short slightly built young men estimated to be 17 years old then the decades of practice bit has a flaw.
PS
If you take a fairly average Mary Rose arrow as an example - let's say MR82A1892/9 as that's one I've measured and copied myself a number of times - you're talking about a 30" long Populus nigra shaft with a 12mm head, a heavy taper down to 10mm a few inches from the head and then a gradual taper to around 8mm at the nock. Shoot that from any bow under 120lb say, and it'll fly like a brick wall. You need at least 120lb to push it far enough to do any sort of damage at the other end, and around 140lb to really get the best from it. There were much, much bigger arrows than 1892/9 on the ship, some even thicker than 1/2" in diameter.
Pope tested a reconstruction of a English war arrow built by another bowter who had studied all information on these available at the time.
His arrow was practically Identical to the majority of recovered MR arrows and modern reconstructions and weighed 2 1/5 ounces with bodkin head.
Pope made some impressive penetration tests with this arrow and 75 lb bow, penetrating the front side of a Syrian made welded ring mail shirt and passing through a torso substitute packed with beef liver.
The arrow struck with sufficient force to cause a shower of sparks.
Since no one seemed to be at all interested in why Pope's Oregon yew stave acted as it did I reread the little he wrote on it.
Apparently due to the proportions and a possible flaw at mid point the bow could not bend into a proper arch, the limbs being too stiff and heavy compared to the grip area. This resulted in the stiff limbs acting like levers.
At least that is how I interpret it.