I'm working on a project bow right now that had the limbs naturally deflexed by 0.75 inches and 1.5 inches. I noticed the other day that if I took the bow, put the bow flat on the ground with the deflex pointed down, put my right hand on a spot about 8 to 10 inches from the tip of the limb, grabbed the bow handle in my left hand and gently bent the bow about six inches in the air (measured from the handle to the floor) and held it there for about 3 minutes with the limb tip on the floor and the bow limb bent around my right hand pressing gently but firmly against the limb, I noticed that after I let it up and measured the extent of the natural deflex, I can reduce it by 1/16th of an inch every time I do that. I did that to the one limb that was 0.75 inches deflexed a couple weeks ago and so far it's held the same and hasn't reverted back. The other limb that was 1.5 inches deflexed, I've got down to 3/8ths of an inch. This self bow is solid hickory. I'm afraid that if I can do this in a few minutes to correct a natural deflex, what is the bow going to do if I shoot for about 1 hour a day for a week? One hour and 12 minutes for an inch and a half versus 7 hours in one week. What I'm afraid of is that over the course of however long due to natural use, if the wood is this responsive to permanent bending, the bow is going to adopt an unheard of deflex resulting in an almost unusable bow.
I remember hearing somewhere that Hickory is famous for being heavy, tough as nails, a bit sluggish, and "takes a nasty set". I can attest to all those points except being "sluggish" since I've never shot a hickory bow before.
I know this is asking alot but do any of you know of a wood that's strong in both compression and expansion (due to the rigors of being a self bow), responsive (instead of being sluggish), and is very very resistant to "taking a set"?
I'm not terribly familiar with all the types of wood people use in making bows and I know there's many many people here at the Trad Gang that are WAY better than me.