Dried unprocessed leg sinew. For backing self bows and tying fletching or points to arrows. Sold by the bag. 1-2 pieces of sinew depending on size. Average length 6-8 inches. Back self bows or tie fletching or points to arrows 1 or 2 pieces per bag Average length varies from 6-8 inches ...read more
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This is a great product and at a reasonable price
it was great to work with and was more than I expected to get
Great
Its rly nice
Unmet expectations
I was looking for a slab of beef tendon, what I got was a pencil sized piece of deer tendon. Your ad should do a better job of managing expectations.
Sorry not enough for the price 3pks 1 pc
Bow backing 1 shank per pack unexpected causing a delay in completion ,will pursue other vendor for this item . great company overall
Great products!
Great products! And fast delivery,!
you can mix the two sinews but you will want to cut the back sinew down to the length of the leg sinew for strength. Sinew backing a bow is the same as laying a brick wall you will want to stagger the bundles for strength. Typically back sinew is used for tying on feathers to an arrow because of its length.
Backing the bow will strengthen the bow and add draw weight. It should be able to handle the 24" draw but with wood it can be tough to say. Id recommend backing it first before attempting it.
Hide glue is what is recommended to use with sinew.
You could technically but that's an expensive and inefficient way of making hide glue. David Young
Yes we can ship this to Australia.
This is from elk.
I believe it's deer leg sinew, I ordered some a while back, I will use it to haft arrowheads or knife blades
There is no way to tell what animal the sinew came from, Ronny, without lab testing, but I'd guess it came from a beef carcass. It works great though, regardless of the animal it came from. Jerry
I believe it is deer sinew
The leg Sinew varies in length from animal to animal so if it is a short psc we will throw in two pieces.
Yes, we can ship it to Canada.
I would recommend to purchase 20 pieces of the leg sinew to do 1 layer on a self bow. Remember once you start a layer of sinew on a self bow you will not want to stop until the layer is complete.
Yes this sinew will work for making a Mongolian style composite bow.
Yes leg sinew and back sinew are just as strong as each other. Back sinew is recommended more for wrapping a splinter on a bow limb and tying feathers to an arrow. Leg sinew is more for sinew backing the bow because of its shorter length allowing you to stagger your bundles for strength.
you can mix the two sinews but you will want to cut the back sinew down to the length of the leg sinew for strength. Sinew backing a bow is the same as laying a brick wall you will want to stagger the bundles for strength. Typically back sinew is used for tying on feathers to an arrow because of its length.