As has been already stated, don't heat it. Spring steel is a hardenable type of carbon steel that is formed cold. The cold forming, winding if coil, bending in a jig if a leaf, introduces stresses in the steel that give it "memory" when it is later flexed. It wants to go back to the original shape it was formed into. Heating a spring relieves those stresses, basically annealing (making soft) the metal. The result would be that the spring will bend at the annealed point, and stay bent.
Be careful about bending that spring. Applying too much force can break it, as there is a certain amount of brittleness in all springs. Too, the older and more used a spring is, they tend to do one of two things: either get soft (heat from flexing over time anneals them), or the metal fractures.
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Today's Featured Article - Madison's County - by Anthony West. Philip Madison has been a good friend of mine for quite some time. He has patiently suffered my incessant chit chat on the subject of tractors for longer than I care to remember, and on many occasions he has put himself out, dropped what ever it was he was doing, to come and lend a hand cranking handles, or loading a find onto a trailer. Although he himself has never actually owned or restored a tractor, he was always enthusiastic and always around helping with other peoples projects.
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