I have been on bow making forums and groups for a few years now... The subject of curing epoxy with heat comes up all the time... I have never heard one person say that my bow failed because I did not get it up to temperature (all being over 70 to 75*)... Matter of fact I here of people having problems with raising the temp too high too fast... I tried different curing methods and never noticed a difference in performance or structural integrity... I talked to a very experienced composites engineer... He said, you are dealing with one thousandth's or less of thickness of a glue joint, don't worry about it, just give the epoxy ample temperature to cure correctly and all the way... Heat distortion comes big into play when you are laminating f/g where the epoxy is relatively thick and is now structural and needs to remain ridgid which is completely different when compared to a glue joint.. Another well known bowyer said high heat is hell on riser wood, and I think we can all agree to that...
My conclusion: I just use common sense... I cure my bows at mostly at 110 to 120*... Its plenty enough to get those molecules moving around to get a good cure in 4 to 5 hours... My hot box is now a wood drying kiln and I use an electric blanket to cure my bows... Anything over 90* is plenty to cure that epoxy well...
My 2 cents...