THAT..... Is a beautiful tip overlay brutha! I might have to give that a go.
Pat, I was actually surprised how easily that kink in the limb straightened out. But that is a rather large C clamp i used too. I believe soaking it and steaming it in boiling water for 30 minutes had something to do with it. We will see how much spring back it has after i pull the clamps. I'm going to build a radius form to reflex the tips a bit on the flat grain side next.
Back when i was building radius top doors for fancy boats, i came up with the idea of building them pre-hung in the cabinet shop. Rather than bending the top of the finished door frame in place in the door rough opening, and fitting each door to the frame. (Like they had been doing) I could use a true radius, build the doors and frames in the shop and adjust the reveal while hanging the pre hung door. I scored a few points with the cabinet shop foreman coming up with that system. :saywhat:The guys i worked with at Christensen Motor Yacht were a serious collection of craftsmen. Luthiers and fine furniture builders that could inlay your signature in mother of pearl. It was an incredible experience working with the old school craftsmen.....Back in the late 80's a lot of that work was still being done by hand. Now days CNC production has taken a lot of the hand work out of play.
But back to my point about wood bending.... What i found building radius top doors was that different types of hardwood have different spring back after bending them in the same form using the same thickness laminations. For example Sitka spruce and Sycamore would have a lot more spring back than Honduras Mahogany, or Teak. And the Teak had more that the Mahogany too. So it was kind of tricky to build door frames to match a true radius door top because you had to calculate the spring back, and use a tighter radius on your form So it fit the door top in a relaxed position. We used a lot of Urac 185 in our lamination work, and a lot of West Systems epoxy too. Believe it or not the type of glue had no effect on spring back. So i'll be curios to see how much it moves.
I think some of the wildest wood bending i ever did was building a free standing spiral stair case out of solid Teak on the aft deck of one of those fancy yachts. That my friends was a wild project.
Kirk