I have a few questions to ask before diving into my first recurve attempt out of an osage stave. I plan on using a heat gun for the heating.
The stave I'm working on has some prop twist and needs to be tweaked sideways a bit to get the tips to line up through the handle, am I correct in assuming that I should do this prior to heating in the recurves?
I have a caul made to put in about 2" of reflex from the handle to the tip while lining the tips up and taking care of the prop twist. Is it too much to ask of the wood to induce this reflex and have recurves?
As of now the limbs are about 2 inches wide from the handle to the tips. I've heard that it is easier to bend the curves in first then narrow the tip width, is this correct?
I have the last 8" or so of each limb down to one growth ring on the belly and at about 5/8" thick, is this too thick for bending with heat? I was hoping for a static recurve.
Is there a number of times of reheating/tweaking that the wood (osage) will not tolerate any more heating/bending?
I am assuming that it will take a number of small heating tweaks after putting in the recurves, to get the proper string alignment, are these extra heatings going to cause the recurves to want to bounce back to their original shape?
Any other advice would be great also. Thanks for the help.
Dave