so i decided to recurve a red oak build i'm doing, having seen it in several buildalongs on the various bowyer sites.
this is the technique i used:
roughed out the board, glued on a handle, got it to the stage where i'd normally back it, right before i put it on the tillering tree.
steamed one tip over a boiling pot covered with aluminum foil for an hour.
took it out of the steam, put it aside for 15 minutes while i erected a series of blocks screwed to my worktop to hold the bow and the recurved end in place.
slotted the bow, gave it several bends of increasing force.
got disappointed by how little recurve i saw in my tip, decided that if wet heat failed, advance to dry heat. applied 1-2 min of 1000 degree heat from a heatgun, while continuing to flex the tip.
withdrew dry heat, noticed numerous fractures where the heat had been applied.
apparently i made a series of mistakes on this one:
1. immediately flex the tip after taking it out of heat
2. leave it in flexed position for a day? (not sure how long to leave it in flex)
3. only ONE application of flex, not the 20 or so that i used
4. complete cooldown of the wood back to room temperature before trying heating then flexing again.
i searched the sites after the failure, found this site:
bending wood with heat which enumerated my many errors for me.
took a buncha pics to post, but the breaks are really hard to see, so not worthwhile posting em. the one positive: the final recurve, minus the break, was GREAT! the bow was 68", and i'm gonna have to hack off 4 inches from each limb, so it looks like my boys are gonna get another bow. not a total loss.
Just a post to point out how not to do it, for any newbies like me thinking of flipping the tips on their next build.