Is there any reason to take them out, other than contact with the fiberglass?
Paranoia me thinks…
perhaps if using thin gage pressure strips, or soft metal it could possibly leave an impression in the glass, but I doubt it.
Years ago when I was going though a transition from using the electric silicone heat strips to something different. I had a buddy build some home made low voltage heat strips from thin fiberglass and Nichrome wire. It was a rather ingenious experiment that worked pretty well at first…. But the durability was poor.
I ruined a pair of those by using the heat strip itself as a pressure strip and broke the wire inside. But it didn’t leave any marks or indentations in the glass.
I tried using Formica as pressure strips with mixed success. It was ok on the 1.5” long bow forms with a tight fitting top form. But the 1.75” wide forms didn’t apply even pressure across the width of the limb and I had issues with cupping.
I’ve always been a trial and error, no balls , no glory kind of guy… nothing ventured, nothing gained…. The hero , or the goat so to speak…. Unfortunately I had some baaaaaahhhhd experiences sometimes…
That’s why I’ve stuck with the battery charger style heat strips for so many years. The 22 gage stainless steel makes bullet proof pressure strips that are flexible enough to reuse 100’s of times.
But…. It’s pure unadulterated battery charger abuse, and the chargers life span is shorter that I’d like. I probably get about 200 bows out of a charger before it burns out. At $200 per charger that’s a dollar a bow cost…So I can live with it.
I’m quite certain in this day of high tech, that a durable and accurate heat strip system could be built. But I have all my bow forms and limb forms fitted with their own stainless steel strips with the bottom one glued in place. So I’m good with what I’ve got going….. Kirk