Thanks SpringyWoodPassion, it really wasn't much work, and the steaming probably wasn't necessary if a better branch had been selected. I also would have wiped on linseed oil as soon as any wood removal was made to lessen the effect Willie pointed out earlier, that the branch will warp toward exposed heartwood. But again even with less than ideal wood selection and wood treatment, it has still made a good bow.
Willie, the bow lost 3 grams last night, so it's still drying. We'll keep reporting until it stops and seems fully dry. I do think the linseed oil has evened out the drying rate across the wood because the deflex isn't increasing. Also I shot two dozen more arrows out of it this morning, full draw, and there was no measurable set. Accuracy was really good (in my hands anyway). I'm really pleased with that.
I'm still looking for my darn bow scale, my beeswax, and my serving spool, all of which I squirreled away someplace unknown 5 years ago when I stopped building. I'll find them, as soon as I wade through a bunch of boxes. it's bugging me.
Meanwhile, in feel, the bow stacks, which is to be expected in a deflexed bow of this type, since braced string tension is low or even slack. On my bow I've set it up with a little braced tension, I can pluck it and get a bass note, but it's a low tone compared to my flipped tip regular bows. And the initial 1/4 draw has comparatively low string tension. So the 2/3 draw figure is going to be on a curve somewhere.
I'll just full draw it with the scale when I find it. I'm not physically worried about doing that. I have 75 arrows through it and continuing, the bow feels quite solid and isn't taking set. The stack isn't extreme, and it doesn't feel like I'm pulling to a limit.
My only worry is that when I do find that scale I'm going to learn that I'm weaker than I was 5 years ago, and what I think is forty pounds ain't!