Gordon,
I agree!
A person wouldn't think there would be any. But evidently, there is. Now, I am not a scientist at all, so I probably cannot give an adequate explanation as to the technical diference...but I'm sure there are guys on here that can. Actually, I am pretty sure I have seen old threads that were centered on this very debate, and I don't want to open that back up. All I can tell you is my experience, which is, I had that elm as dry as it could get. I heated it several times in flame and over the stove, and had it sitting all day in the sun on the dashboard of my truck, and yet, when I cut the tip off as I said, it was green.
I think you can dry some woods all you want to, but if that wood has not yet fully "accepted" that it is dead and should give up the ghost and that the fibers should crystalize themselves, then it will still take considerable set because it still hasn't had time to realize that it is cut and dead. I think some woods are worse at this than others. But just ask any of the hardcore osage guys, if they'd prefer a roughed out osage stave that has been heatbox cured for 2 months or the same roughed out osage stave stored in regular dry air for 2 years and see which they prefer. They will all say "I'll take both!" but in honesty will prefer the 2 year cured stave every time if they can only pick one.
I made a bow a few months ago from white elm with the same dimensions as the one that took 3.5 inches of set, only it had been air dried for 2 years, and it takes a very small ammount of set when strung, but when unstrung goes right back to 0. This one that took the 3.5" stayed that way after unstringing.
I guess maybe you could compare it to wine? It has to ferment, no matter what you do to speed it along, you cannot replace good, old fashioned, father time.
CP