Howdy guys,
I have read all I can find on all the Trad archery sites about tempering bow bellies, specifically with a heat gun. And there seems to be no consensus as to what is the proper method.
I know that different woods take heat tempering differently, but I'm interested is white woods. I see some prefer to get the wood dark brown, some like it golden, and yet others want no color change at all. Some hold the gun in one spot, others move it back and forth. Some hold it 6" above the limb, others, 1" above.
So is there really a right or wrong, or is it about getting the heat to penetrate deeply and change the cell structure, and the color really doesn't matter? That's what I'm starting to think. As long as the wood gets evenly heated and gets real hot, color doesn't matter. Any thoughts?
Btw, I just attempted my first tempering on a red oak board bow last night. It was freshly tillered, not shot in yet. 46# @ 28", 1 1/4" set. Clamped it straight and used the heat gun about 30 min each limb, got it light brown on the belly. Came out of the clamps pretty straight his morning. Guess we'll see how it works. If it gained a few pounds and stayed straight, I'd be pleased. The belly got kinda shiny so it looks like something changed there.