I saw your short on Youtube and commented the numbers for my last succcessful set of bends there but will include them here as well:
Wood species: black walnut
Slat thickness: 085"
Softening agent: Windex with Ammonia D
Paper used: white kitchen parchment paper (don't tell my wife!)
Amount used: I just spritzed enough to soak the paper; I didn't soak the wood overnight or anything like that
Initial Bending temperature: 250 degrees F
Bending "sandwich" arrangement (top to bottom): silicone heating blanket, metal slat, paper, wood, paper, metal slat.
Bending sequence: lower bout, top bout, waist
Final bending temperature: 305 degrees F (basically I never unplugged the blanket and just let it continue to increase while I'm in the process of moving the cauls)
Total duration of bending process: 5 minutes (4 minutes for the blanket to heat up from plug in to 250 degrees, 1 minute to do the actual clamping; on the upper bout I proceeded slower and "walked" the caul down because I'm using a tauter set of springs.)
PS: on my failed bending attempts (when I would just use water) I was watching for steam and that's not quite hot enough to start the bend. 212 is the boiling point of water but apparently the cells haven't had time to fully soften yet.
After this, I begin the "plug and play" process (because I don't have a thermostat to vary the voltage) and try not to let the heat go above 310. I do this for 15 minutes before unplugging the blanket for good. Then I let it sit overnight to set the bend. The next day I pull it out and haven't had any spring back.
PS: I did this process successfully with zebrawood. The key thing I appeared to be doing wrong was not sanding the thickness down enough, starting when there wasn't enough heat and cranking down on the upper bout too quickly.
I've also filmed each attempt (3) and put them on youtube. What's apparent to me is that I'm less nervous with each attempt. The last one was really smooth and I"m actually looking forward to starting another build as soon as I can.
https://youtu.be/IM1UBkEgPvI (I'm hoarse and talky in the beginning but the actual bending takes place from 1:22 to 2:16 and there's a cut of just a couple of seconds between.)