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  2. Bear Archery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bear_Archery

    Fred Bear sold the advertising side of the Bear Products Company in 1940. The archery business was named Bear Archery. In 1947 the company moved to a new facility in Grayling, Michigan. The Grayling plant focused on making and marketing recurve bows and longbows in a growing archery market. Bow manufacturing changed from hand-made bows to mass ...

  3. Fred Bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Bear

    Fred Bear (March 5, 1902 – April 27, 1988) was an American bow hunter and manufacturer. Although he did not start bow hunting until he was 29 and did not master the skill for many years, he is widely regarded as a pioneer in the bow hunting community. Bear was a world traveler, film producer, and the founder of Bear Archery.

  4. Archery Trade Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archery_Trade_Association

    Today, the industry's 22 essential "ATA Standards" are defined in the ATA Technical Guidelines, [3] a manual that represents about 50 years of accumulated engineering knowledge and expertise dating to Earl Hoyt, Dick Mauch (Bear Archery), and Chuck Saunders. Although these early manufacturers were business rivals, they wanted archery dealers ...

  5. Bowstring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowstring

    Almost any fiber may be used in emergency. Natural fibers would be very unusual on a modern recurve bow or compound bow, but are still effective and still used on traditional wooden or composite bows. Sinew and hide strings may be seriously affected by water. [4] The author of Arab Archery suggests the hide of a young, emaciated camel. [5]

  6. Recurve bow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recurve_bow

    In archery, a recurve bow is one of the main shapes a bow can take, with limbs that curve away from the archer when unstrung. A recurve bow stores more energy and delivers energy more efficiently than the equivalent straight-limbed bow, giving a greater amount of energy and speed to the arrow .

  7. Eskimo archery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskimo_archery

    Eskimo hunter and polar bear slain with bow and arrow The cable backed bow, showing the bow (a) bearing the tensioned cable (b) along the face of it, attached by bindings (c). Finally, the bow strung with the main string (d). Spruce wood is nearly inelastic in compression, but usually the best available material for the belly of the bow.

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