I did not think I could get water/steam hot enough to bend the sugar maple. I had tried steam on a hickory ramrod blank earlier without success. (Probably didn't heat it long enough but lost confidence in steam none the less) Plus, prior experience having walnut shotgun stocks bent had been done by professionals using hot oil, and in these cases there was not any damage to even the finish on them. I was able to maintain 300 degrees on the wrist with the oil and heat guns. Steam doesn't get to higher than 212 degrees unless it is in a pressurized container. I can tell you that even at 270 degrees this maple was not bendable. It was only after an hour at 300 degrees that I finally felt some yield in the maple. I heated the oil to 350 degrees in the pan and applied heat guns to the cotton cloth wrappings of the wrist to keep the oil hot. As the cloths dried more hot oil was spooned on . The excess was caught in a shallow pan and recycled to the heating pan. I have observed the oil bending of walnut but this was my first effort at bending any wood and sugar maple is at the hardest to do end of the wood bending spectrum. So I choose the successful system I had observed.