I´ve found two different answers, if a hornbow is heated while being strung.
Adam Karpowicz writes that the hornbow is not heated when braced with tepeliks. The bow must be unbraced before correcting the allignment with heat in order to not lose reflex in the bending area.
This korean video however shows that the allignment is corrected with heat while the bow is braced at 40:00 minutes. But it seems that the bowyer only heats the comparatively stiff outer parts of the limbs and not the main bending area. In addition to that a leather strap is bound bethween the limb and the string in order not to loose any reflex.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjZBY1rlxu0COMING BACK TO THE ORIGINAL QUESTION if holding reflex is overrated on wooden bows, I ask myself how we can distinguish bethween the following two possible reasons for this loss:
1. The heated reflex of the limb is only "pulled out" without damaging the wood on the belly (deformation, but no set?).
2. The reflex is reduced because the wood cells on the belly are crushed (set).
The second scenario would be worse of course, because the crushed wood cells might increase hysteresis. Does anyone have an idea how we can distinguish bethween those two?
lonbow