To the bolded: Oh I feel you. I am always astonished at the new and creative ways autodidact hobby "chemists" find to ruin a simple process.
Since I do not sell, I imagine you could classify me as a recreational extractor. However, I did put my time in: five years grad school in organic chemistry, postdoc at two schools whose name you'd recognize at once, and eleven years at (big-name company) pulling back the foreskin of science (as my Swiss boss put it) in the service of a number of therapeutic targets. I can read a nomogram, perform a serial dilution in the dark, smell carbonyl groups and find the best solvents for reaction and recrystallization on a millimole-to-multimole scale.
But yeah, I am a recreational extractor.
I am again curious. How do you work to spare your terpenes, and do you have any analytical data to show terpene content and ratios before and after your hot step? I am always keen to pick up any tricks and pointers I can get toward sparing the terpenes.
The next question I have is: Since you are redissolving your extract in medium-chain triglycerides (which are excellent wax solvents) why do you need to "winterize" or, in the professional vernacular, dewax your iso extract? That seems like a redundant step to me, especially since waxes are of no consequence in an edible preparation.