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  2. Recurve bow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recurve_bow

    Older recurves and some modern hunting recurves are one-piece bows. Hunters often prefer one-piece bows over take-down bows, because the limb pockets on take-down bows can make unwanted noise while drawing. Barebow is another type of modern recurve bow. It usually uses the same riser and limbs as a recurve, but lacks a sight, stabilizers, and ...

  3. Bow shape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bow_shape

    The working limbs of "paddle" bows maintain width for almost the entire limb length, "pyramid" bows taper uniformly from the handle to a narrow tip, and "Holmegaard-style" bows remain full width to about two-thirds of the way along the limb, then narrow sharply. "Eiffel Tower" bows taper sharply, but smoothly, to a very narrow outer tip.

  4. Glossary of archery terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_archery_terms

    limb-driven rest (equipment) – A drop-away rest that is mechanically linked to one of a compound bow's limbs. Longbow - A type of bow that is usually used for long shots; loose (practice) – The act of shooting an arrow from a bow (a.k.a. release) laminated bow (equipment) – A bow with different materials laminated together to make a ...

  5. Inferior longitudinal fasciculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_longitudinal...

    ILF supports brain functions concerning the visual modality, including object, face and place processing, reading, lexical and semantic processing, emotion processing, and visual memory. Based on these recent findings ILF can be described as a multi-functional white matter pathway involved in visually guided behavior (See Herbet et al. for ...

  6. Compound bow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_bow

    The limbs store the kinetic energy of the bow – no energy is stored in the pulleys and cables. Draw weights of adult compound bows range is between 40 and 80 pounds (18 and 36 kg), which can create arrow speeds of 250 to 370 feet per second (76 to 113 m/s).

  7. Flatbow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatbow

    The flatbow is a superior bow design for almost all materials because the stress is more evenly spread out than with rounded limb sections. A bow limb is essentially a flexed beam undergoing bending, and in any flexed beam the farther from the neutral axis (line in the middle of the flexing beam which is not under tension or compression: see diagram in Bending article) the more stress there is ...