Cured Hide glue does not suffer from heat,
Oh yes it does.
Sure if you throw it in the fire it will burn but that's not what we are talking about here
If the surface of the bow heats up beyond 105 degrees farenheit, glue is going to soften up considerably. That can easily happen in a quiver exposed to direct sunlight south of the 35th parallel, particularly if the quiver is animal skin.
105 F. Really? I have done a mild heat-treat on a sinew backed bow with no adverse effects to the hide glue and that was a heck of a lot higher temp than 105 F. You must be thinking of those people that use TB3 with their sinew to back bows and even then it would take a lot more than 105 degrees, maybe 105 degrees C.
Spreading false information doesn't help anyone
You're a riot. You have no way of knowing whether your bow was affected or not. For all you know, it would have shot better without the heat treatment. Adam Karpowicz tried to bend a glued up Scythian bow and made sure, using an electric thermometer, that the surface temperature never exceeded 60⁰F. The glue softened up, and one of the (
sinew-backed) joints in the wooden core slipped. What makes you think the sinew isn't slipping and catching air bubbles at those temperatures? It most assuredly is. You just can't see it. You'll never know what that bow's performance could have been without the heat treatment/abuse.
The takeaway here though is that Adam did a more severe bend than probably anyone here has ever done, using less than 60⁰C heat. You will never need a temperature higher than that as a bowyer.
I never, ever let glue get exposed to +105⁰F degree heat. That you would expose it to 105⁰C reveals your ignorance. That kind of temperature will destroy wood, much less glue. These materials aren't heat resistant as some of you seem to bizarrely think they are. Why you think you would need that much temperature is perplexing, when they clearly respond more ideally to warmth (100-105⁰f degress farenheit), rather than heat. A fact that aptly demonstrates their sensitivity to temperature change.