You can buy small ingots of bismuth alloy from Small Parts. Some of the available alloys will melt in boiling water, which shows you how to recycle the material.
Once you have a tube or pipe filled with soft metal, bending it is as easy, or as hard, as bending a rod of the same diameter, and you can use the same tooling.
Taking that one step further, there's no reason why you couldn't stick a thin aluminum channel into a tube, fill the space between them with bismuth, bend the assembly, melt out the bismuth and cut away the tube.
Okay, I can see some potential problems getting the channel features lined up with the bend axis and positioning the channel so as to get the exact radius you want.
You can also buy or make tooling that will bend thin wall channel directly, without the bismuth, within reason.
There's also the possibility of flanging a radiused blank, i.e. turning it into a channel after it's 'bent'. Or, if the bend goes the other way, you can apply metal shrinkers and stretchers to the flanges.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA