meles meles wrote:Yes, ooman, I shoot a real yew warbow. It's weakening now, down to about 110 lbs from 125, having had almost 270 shots. A full power, ie 180 - 200 lb bow such as our forebears used at Agincourt would only make 40 or so shots before it broke. There are to my knowledge two men alive today who can draw a 200 lb bow, and a handful who can manage 180 lbs. I aspire to a 140 lb bow but its doubtful I'll ever get there, I took up the sport far too late.
Check your string, if it's a flax string it will go before the bow will. If a bow was going to break after 40 or so shots either the string has broken or there was something wrong with the bow. I can imagine the language at Agincourt would have been as deadly as the arrows if bows where breaking after 40 or shots!
I haven't heard of any references to 200lb longbows, most references indicate longbows being in the region of 125-150lb. The heaviest I have heard of are the set of 180lb bows recovered from the Mary Rose.
This will make the basis of an interesting conversation at the club on Thursday. One of the Archers that runs the club has been shooting for about 60 years - it there's something he doesn't know, then it's not worth knowing.
I'd still like pictures of you bow and of war arrows.
Do you know of this competition? 7/8 July 2012
http://www.longbow-archers.com/LeafletM ... ootENG.pdf Looks right up your alley.
For practitioners of the longbow the Mary Rose Trust has lent its name to a series of trials that replicate what was expected of the Medieval longbow archer. These trials will be held on a yearly basis by the Fraternity of Saint George.
The International Mary Rose Warbow Trophy will be the benchmark all-round test of the longbowman's skill;
power; precision; trajectory; range; speed; distance. It will be shot with longbows ranging from 70 to 170 lbs draw-weight. It will demand arrows of up to 1200 grain to be shot over 220 yards and it will test whether the new generation of Warbows can hit 22 inches at 220 yards.