i am very pro experimentation- and dont believe that there is only one way to do things- i hail from a country( in africa) where resources are very scarce- so we just learnt to be inventive and to make do.- so i fully understand
for me, right now, its just easier to buy the glass , its so cheap- comparatively to the value of a bow!!
even though i have had extensive glass experience( had a factory in south africa - making competition kayaks, safety helmets and paddles etc) but i just dont have any spare time to to re set up for glass- just got too much hunting, bow building, home remodel, sailing, fishing, womanizing/wife lovin', kayak building etc etc to get done.
but here are a few extra ideas, just from my thoughts- and please just take them as intended- an intent to be helpful, and not critical
1.if you are going to laminate up to the wood during the toffee stage( do i understand you correctly here?) the 60 psi pressure in the laminating stage may, or may not effect the glass.
2.do a search on the bench here- there was a fella who did make some glass- and he seemed to have a pretty good measure of success- i will see if i can find the link as well- intead of vac bagging it- he used a weighted pressure strip layed on top
3. the glass strands- need to be tensioned pre- wet out- he did devise a system- now i would imagine that this is quite critcal to bow design consistency- different tensions on each different piece of glass will show a variance in the glass performance- will this be noticeable in a bow- DUNNO- but a simple scale type system attached to the tensioning device would be good. - overall his system was pretty good- thats the only place i would have made an improvement- with a scale!
4. peel ply and all that stuff is great for commercial runs- and might just be an unnecessary cost for small runs- good release wax, is all i would use- you are going to sand it anyway- on the negative side.- just my opinion- but guess if you are gonna bag- then the peel ply will be imperative anyway.
good luck mate- keep us posted- i think all these projects are cool!!!!
cheers
wayne