I finished my first heat treated bow. Its hickory, 67" long and 1 1/8" wide. It pulled 65 pounds at 27" when I first finished tillering, I expect it will have dropped a few pounds. I was going for a 60 pounder. I first dried it and removed some of the deflex with heat and lard, as the stave had about an inch of deflex to start. I tillered it to 60 pounds at 24". At that time it had about a half inch of string follow. I then reverse braced it. I propped it over an old charcoal grill about 12" from a bed of charcoal and gave it an hours toasting which made the belly a medium brown. I waited a couple days and started tillering again. I finished tillering to 27" and the bow now has an inch of string follow. The bow has a flat belly and crowned back, it was made from a small diameter tree. I finished it with tung oil.
I made a linen string for it and shot it, it seems to shoot great. Only problem is, right in the back at the arrow pass, there's a small spot where a tiny lateral crack seemed to be. It appears there is a small knot there. The back was simply the wood directly under the bark so no ring chasing was done at all. The tiny crack appears to be the edge of a growth ring where it meets the knot. The crack followed up the growth ring in a splinter-like way. I did a small amount of scraping and sanding to the area which took the edges of the crack away, making it disappear. Again, it was very tiny to begin with. There is still a small dark spot on the edge of the knot where the edge of the crack was. I braced it back about 18" and applied some wood glue, then relaxed the bow, just in case there was any separation still there, so the glue could get in. Hopefully all will be well now.
Overall I was pretty happy with taking a stave with 1" of deflex to begin with, and ending up with a 65# bow with 1" of string follow. I am not used to seeing any back problems on my bows and wonder if this little cracked area was due to the stress on the back from the belly being toasted. The bow has an even tiller so that shouldn't be the issue. Anyways, I call it a success and my next bow, an elm stave, will be heat treated too.