I'd like to hear some successfull examples of big bends in vine maple. I'm talking mostly about sideways bends for correcting string alignment, or bends in the handle. I have had success with recurving tips on VM, but when it comes to thicker and wider parts of the bow, i have trouble with the bow returning to nearly it's original shape after a few days. Here's my method: first, I reduce the bow to about 2X2 for initial drying for 1-2 months in unheated shed. Then I reduce to about 1.25 x 1.25 and bring it inside for a month.My previously (mostly) straight stave now looks like a bannana. Let's say the stave has a string alignment that is 3 inches off (3 inches from the string to the center line of the handle). I boil a giant kettle of water, about 1.5 foot diameter (like you boil crabs in). I lay the stave across the kettle, cover with foil and a towel, and steam for an hour at a slow boil. I remove the stave and get it in a jig within 10 seconds. The jig bends it way past straight, until the alignment is off on the other side of the handle by a bit. This I leave outside overnight. When removed, the string alignment looks just about perfect, but over the course of a day or so, it returns almost to where it was. I have had success with small sideways corrections, but not big ones like this.
Lately, I'm working on a stave that was fully 4 inches off in string alignment, and after steaming sections several times, the bow is still almost 2 inches off. Am I doing something wrong? Or Am I just asking too much in trying for these big corrections?
It's not that I don't have any straight staves, but that I want to save the multitude of staves that end up crooked.