First is a pic of the new solid bending form I made for an MJ. It uses the 4 off-cuts from the mold I made and I added strips of pine 1x2. I made the two halves and joined them afterwards because that was easy for me given my tools and i didn't want to cut up more mdf. But you could easily just make it out of 8 layers of mdf. I have made the form to over bend the side slightly.

My SS slats for bending are joined at the tail end and I added a galvanised strip between the two slats so the wood and blanket have room to slide all the way in. On the open end there is another gal strip only on the top slat. I have drilled holes in the gal strips so i can attach springs or turnbuckles.

So load up your wood and heat blanket as usual. Locate your waist mark and when your wood is nice and hot, crank down the waist but not all the way. Then bend your lower and upper bouts as usual and connect your turnbuckles and secure them to the bender some how. I have rigged up different attachment points for each shape I use. You just need to make sure that the side follows the natural curve of the mold or you will put a kink in the side where it comes off the mold. If your molds are over size this may not be a problem. Its easy at the head end but harder at the tail where most of the difference seems to be. I just screwed a wood block to the end of the bender so I have attachment points.
Don't do the turnbuckles up too tight just yet but get them located. Now, crank the waist down all the way and the slats will pull up nice and tight. Lastly, just adjust your turnbuckles to take out any slack and you are done. You can put enormous pressure on the wood this way. The tension created by the top slat pulling everything down means there is nowhere for the side to go if it wants to ripple. Using the solid mold underneath has improved this system.


Cheers
Dom