Hey Kirk I can see how the heat strips can provide even heat along the limbs but what about traveling a couple inches up the riser on the belly ramps?
When i lay up a one piece with heat strips i run one strip on the form full length, (74" length) then the top heat strip runs full length too right up the belly ramps both top and bottom. The trick is rounding off your riser block at the tops of the belly ramps... I leave extra room above my riser in the top form for the shape of the heat strip to conform to both belly ramps, then use a block of wood mid point on the riser So the air hose puts even pressure down on the riser. I zip tie that riser in place so it doesn't move on me too....
Years ago i tried running the glass full length with a partial riser on the lay up, then doing the belly side of the riser as an overlay..... I didn't care for the looks at all, and gave the bow away at an archery shoot "un named"... LOL It was too ugly to put my name on..
Besides being ugly, i don't like running glass or phenolic material through the riser. The composite materials expand and contract at different rates with MC levels and heat to use as accent strips. I don't do it on my TD risers either. It's fine for riser overlays, and i use phenolic on limb pad caps all the time, but I don't use glass on limb pad caps because it splits too easily.
Actually... I'm not real fond of building one piece bows. I discontinued all my one piece RC bows, but still build my Flatliner, and Stealth models. I much prefer TD bows... Kirk