Referring to the picture in Post #40 if that crossbow could be viewed in slow motion when it is
shot the unserved strands of that bowstring will hit the rubber stops. This is where the added
serving is required to protect the bowstring strands.
The pictures in Post #37, part of the serving hits the rubber stops when the crossbow is shot but
still an unserved area is not protected.
Who ever is building the bowstring is either building for a different crossbow or not realizing that
the serving is not done properly.
Different parts of crossbows are sub contracted out and if customer control does not check, this
is where the customer gets the faulty product.
Wishing you all the best.
Take care.
Do a little more research into materials used in today's bow strings.
It's not faulty, and it's manufacturer has made more bow strings in a day than you'll make in a decade.
Yes, servings used to cover strings, but show me a bow from the last 5 years with a fuzzed up factory string. There are reasons why they use the materials that they do.
The only thing it hurts to serve the extra 2 inches is a bit of speed. But if it's not causing any issues, there is no need to make one where it doesn't exist.
@grzech2005 your string is perfectly fine and completely Normal. Shoot it until it needs to be reserved, and then serve until your hearts content.