I'm another with one fully successful bow behind me, plus a couple of recovery projects. Couple of things that might be of interest to you...
I've seen a couple of longbows built with 3/8" tips... that's narrow. I'm currently finishing up a bow that has a tip dimension of .669... only problem is, that isn't only the tip dimension... that's the width of the whole bow... tip to tip including the riser! This was a case of one edge of a layup not laminating, so I sliced off what I could save and made a bow. Came out 17# and shoots incredibly well. I shot an 80 target 3D day with it Sat. and did as well as I ever have. Someone suggested that the narrowness got rid of a lot of mass and allowed the bow to recover exceptionally well for its draw weight. I chrono'ed it at 111 fps... with 15.3 grain per pound arrows, finger released from a 25" draw. I plan to do more experimenting with exceptionally narrow bows. Oh, yeah... the stack on this bow is .333, or a relationship of core to width of almost exactly 3/1.
Re glass thickness. No personal experience, but advice I received early on is that glass thinned than .040 tends to be easily scratched or marred, which can lead to breaking. I'm using .040 exclusively and trying to build to light weights of 25 to 30 pounds.