I recently made a nice hickory board bow all the way through to the point I would toast the belly and put a finish on it, then decided to try to add recurve to the tips.
I made a mold with about 11" diameter bend of 45°. I first tried using a heat gun over a period of about 30 minutes with mineral oil, and got it bending, but it cracked open.
I dont know if it was because I'd already tillered the limb (it had 1.5" of set), or if the radius was too tight, or if I didnt heat it properly (the crack was about 1/8" in from the surface). I might have used too much heat and not enough time?
I decided to experiment and boiled the other limb for about 2 hrs, then put it on the mold. It bent much easier and only a small crack lifted on the surface of the belly. It was a failure, but much less than the dry heat was.
So I have made myself a new mold that has a much larger 45° curve to it that should span the last 10" of the limb. I feel like this curve would work fine even with my dry heating method, but I'd still like to improve it if possible.
Would it be better for me to attempt to add the recurve earlier on in the process, before there is stress added to the ends on the limbs? Also, if I plan to dry the roughed out bow in a box with a space heater before tillering, would it be good to put recurve in it before drying?