I have a yew stave, 1.5 inches by 1.5 inches by 74" long. It has 3 inches of decurve at the worst part, one limb having a long, gradual decurve, and the other limb having most of the decurve in the last 15 inches.
I am thinking of building a steam box and steaming the whole thing all at once and pressing it into a form to bring the whole thing straight in one go. To create the jig, I am thinking of creating a jig that allows for "springback" by taking the wood 10% past straight. If I take the wood down to front profile and taper thickness close to where I will start shaping/tillering, it should not need to steam for an excessive length of time.
I have traced the side view profile on a long sheet of paper and have measured every 3 inches and then drawn the new shape with the extra 10% figured in at every 3 inch interval.
Does this make sense? Kick holes in my theory, point out flaws if you can see them.