That has been asked a million times. The standard reply is "no". I answered the same way to a point. I have heated up fades in the past and pushed a handle back to gain draw weight and move my tips forward. It worked every time I did it and the bow didn't get any worse. I had a 64" snakey Osage bow with 4" of set, and 57# @ 28". It was an early bow and I rushed the tiller and over stressed the bow badly. After two cups of Joe I headed to the shop to do battle with this experimental bow, what did I have to lose? I scraped the skins off the back, removed two sinew bands I had holding wind checks in place and removed the grip. I sanded and scraped the whole bow clean and smooth again. The first thing I did was literally remove half the weight on the last 10" of limb, she was a bit robust to say the least. I lost about 3-4# of draw by doing so. I rasped the fades allot and got them moving properly. I lost another 3-4# doing that. I scraped both limbs evenly after I got the tiller corrected. By the time I done and the bow was all sanded smooth with 80 grit I lost a total of 12# in draw weight..............I still have that 4" of set I began with. I clamped her down the my 4" full relflex caul and set to work with my heat gun bending and forming the bow to the form. The instant I shut the heat gun off I darted outdoors with the caul and bow in hand and sat it all on our back deck to instantly chill in 25 degree temps. This was an experiment of sorts to see if "flash" cooling would impact the bow or the forming at all. I let it sit outside for 4 hours and then brought it in for another hour to acclimate, it was actually sweating a tiny bit. I inspected the bow top to bottom for cracks and found none, except for the two wind checks I started with. I un-clamped the bow and to my total suprise it held more reflex than any other bow I had ever built off that form, which is a bunch now. I strung it about half brace and let it sit for 15 minutes. Then I pulled it to 20" several times over letting the wood removal take effect. I went out and shot it 20 times @ 20" and came back in and unbraced it, it held 1 1/2" reflex right away..........wow. I waited a half hour and braced it fully. Went out and shot another 20 arrows at 24", came in and unbraced her and the same 1 1/2" came right back in a snap.I braced it back up fully and went out and shot 20 arrows at 28" and came back in, unbraced her at she held 1" of relflex. Its been an hour unbraced and its back to 1 1/2". Several things happened today for me. I BELIEVE the flash cooling may play a part in holding my new shape more firmly, I BELIEVE that I removed enough over stressed wood from both the back and belly that the bow was able to be retrained. All in all I lost 5# of the original draw weight and gained at least 5-8 fps, quite impressive to me. I'm sure a few hundred shots from now it will lose some more, but it wont be nearly as bad as what I started with. I made up nearly 5" of tip movement alone. If you read this WHOLE bit, please feel free to comment, politely argue or discuss!