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Your idea of the perfect longbow

Started by Mike Mecredy, April 20, 2013, 04:05:00 PM

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Mike Mecredy

Hi All,  without mentioning the bowyer, the company ect. Describe to me the characteristics of what you think is the perfect longbow.  

(and there's no such thing as a perfect longbow isn't a good answer, I already know that, I just want your opinions as hardcore trad bow hunters)
TGMM Family of the bow
USAF, Retired
A.C.B.C.S.

JEFF B

for me its got to be short 60" re flex de flex and thin tapering limbs oh and 45 to 50# @27 to 28" draw and have a core of  bamboo and skins of osage with osage riser
'' sometimes i wake up Grumpy;
other times i let her sleep"

TGMM FAMILY OF THE BOW

dnovo

For me it has to be a longbow as in long. Minimun 64" mild r/d design or straight limb with straight or very slight semi dish grip. No recurve handles or deep locator grip. I like bamboo core although that isn't a sticking point
PBS regular
UBM life member
Compton

red hill

With my short draw the bow won't be very long. But it does need to be light in the hand, draw smoothly, and have no hand shock upon release. I really like osage, but other materials are okay, too. It should have a strait profile or maybe a little reflex.

Mudd

Minimum 66-68" 46-48@28  long elegant look with narrow limbs, deep core, shorter riser, grip at least 2" front to back, straight or very mild dish.

Limbs trapped and a small amount of string follow.

Limb cores would be a combo of bamboo, yew divided with a thin piece of white glass sandwiched in. Brown glass on the front and ivory glass on the belly. Riser wood... what else but mytrle.

No limb tip overlays but wedges.

When I put my hand to it, I end up in "Sherwood".

God bless,Mudd
Trying to make a difference
Psalm 37:4
Roy L "Mudd" Williams
TGMM- Family Of The Bow
Archery isn't something I do, it's who I am!
The road to "Sherwood" makes for an awesome journey.

awbowman

The grip fits and the arrows are tuned.  After that it doesn't matter... Unless you need to shoot pretty bows too!
62" Super D, 47#s @ 25-1/2"
58" TS Mag, 53#s @ 26"
56" Bighorn, 46#s @ 26.5"

ron w

I like'm all, well almost all, straight, string follow, mild R/D, reverse handle. Not a real fan of the short hybrid forward handle type. I like bamboo cores and nice grainy lams but will buy a bow with black or brown glass if it meets my specs. I like 64-68", 45-50# @ 29".......and that's that!   :thumbsup:
In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities. In the expert's there are few...So the most difficult thing is always to keep your beginner's mind...This is also the real secret of the arts: always be a beginner.  Shunryu Suzuki

ChrisM

Quiet (supsonic arrow speed so this is the only way to lessen jumping the string), Stable or forgiving.
Gods greatest command:  Love your neighbor as you love yourself.

BOHO

Id say it depends on its use. a hunting/scouting bow will be a lot different than a practice/form bow. for a hunting bow I like 58" and upper 50# range at 28". Its got to be quiet and shoot where Im looking. for me 58" seems to be long enough to be smooth but short enough to be maneuverable. for a form bow Id like something around 64-66" and in the upper 40 to 50# range at 28. Great for working on form and not fighting draw weight.
TGMM Brotherhood of the Bow
Black Widow Recurve
Mike Corby Special
DAS Recurve

Ric O'Shay

QuoteOriginally posted by Mudd:
Minimum 66-68" 46-48@28  long elegant look with narrow limbs, deep core, shorter riser, grip at least 2" front to back, straight or very mild dish.

Limbs trapped and a small amount of string follow.

Limb cores would be a combo of bamboo, yew divided with a thin piece of white glass sandwiched in. Brown glass on the front and ivory glass on the belly. Riser wood... what else but mytrle.

No limb tip overlays but wedges.

When I put my hand to it, I end up in "Sherwood".

God bless,Mudd
X2!!
I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.   - Thomas Jefferson

monterey

66 to 72 inches.  1.5 inch at the fades, low tip weight, longish riser (17 to 18 inch).  Limbs narrow at the tips.  1/2 to 1 inch reflex starting about four inches beyond the fades in a continuous even arc.

Pretty much the Bingham design.

I know, it's not a "hill", but it has less hand shock.
Monterey

"I didn't say all that stuff". - Confucius........and Yogi Berra

Pat B.

Mudd did just fine, except make mine closer to 60#

Gen273

A short forward handle longbow, at least that is what I like.
Jesus Saves (ROM 10:13)

lueger

Just joined and this discussion caught my eye right away. I absolutelly love my h.hill but like monterey alluded to, that hand shock will jar you, if a little off on form.
Especially at 75#. 72" length helps some. I'd like to try some other performance longbows for comparison.
Been shooting trad for a long time. It's in my blood. However.. when I shoot wheels and sights.. the bullseye is regular and boring

threeunder

60"-62" R/D

Light as a feather.
Quiet as a mouse.
Hits like Thor.

52#-54#
Leather or Beaver grip.

Think MOAB.
Ken Adkins

Never question a man's choice in bows or the quality of an animal he kills.  He is the only one who has to be satisfied with either of those choices.

LongStick64

American Straight limb D Bow, 68" Green Glass with back set
Primitive Bowhunting.....the experience of a lifetime

The Whittler

A good grip like on most hybrid. The number 1 thing is no too very little hand shock.

RecurveRookie

Lightweight, quick, no shock, super quiet, efficient, graceful form, FORGIVING.
Maddog Mountaineer 57# and Prairie Predator 52# Wow!, Samick Sage 35 - 60#,  I'm learning.

ironmike

for ground hunting a 68" narrow limbed laminated yew[4lambs]narrow hill handle,a little bit a r/d/,small shelf.  for brush hunting 62" or less.

Horserod

It has to be smooth shooting with little to no handshock.  Forgiving. Able to launch an arrow with some authority and beautiful to look at and pleasing to hold in your hand.  At a reasonable cost!  That should do to start with.......Horserod


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