I'm with D. Ipe is ridiculously strong stuff. It can't even be compared to most any other woods.
I built a bow for a buddy that was a BBI 67" ttt, approximately 1 1/8" wide, for his 29" draw. and it was approximately 65# @28". Can't remember the thickness but I believe aroung 5/8" or a bit more.
Glued in 1" of reflex, stands nearly perfectly straight when unstrung. Spoke to him the other day and he says it's still shooting strong and fast as new. I always liked the look of an osage core or powerlam on a BBI bow. Other woods might be faster but the osage is a great contrast for the ipe.
Depenging on what weight you want, you could also rip that ipe into 2 strips of ~5/16" thickness and get two bows out of it. If the first comes out a bit light, just make the core on the second slightly thicker.
1/8" bamboo tapered to 1/16" at the tips, 3/16" core tapered to 1/16", and ipe of 5/16" gives you approximately 9/16" at the fades and 3/8" at the tips. I dunno maybe thats a 40-45# bow roughly. depending on riser length, reflex, etc.
Probably very little tillering required.
Going to a 1/4" tapered to 1/8" core lam (or adding another parallel core lam of .060" -.070") would bring the weight up quite a bit too. maybe 25% or more.