This is probably one of my longest responses ever. Please bear with me and excuse the the mistakes, my fat fingers don’t do well typing on my phone.
First, I have always ground my own lam's. Always used the same sleds, sanding belts, ect..
When I first started making glass bows I bought several boxes of bamboo flooring and then made over a hundred bows. After building a couple dozen bows I got it down to repeditive production work. Mic the lam's, butter them up, cook, lay out the pattern with my metal pattern, then grind to the lines. The bows were almost always 2-4 pounds over the target weight, and close to dead on when final sanding was done.
Anyway, a few years later I had used up all those boxes of bamboo flooring and needed some new lam material. I went to the flooring store and bought several more boxes of the same brand flooring, the boxes were almost identical to the old boxes. The next 6-8 bows I made with the new lam's came in 8-18 pounds heavy. I was pulling out the little hair I still had trying to figure what was wrong.
I'd like to say I figured it out on my own, but I didn't.... I'm too dense. A few weeks later we were putting together a video for the PBS and Dick Robertson dropped by one evening. We took a break out in my garage and started B.S.ing about bow making and other things when he asked how my bow making was going. When I told him I that after roughout I was getting tolerances within a few pounds until a couple of months before he asked what was different. After a couple of minutes and a bunch of questions, he had isolated the issue and told I needed to scrap all the old data in my glass bow log, get new core material, and start over. He said due to the inconsistency of wood he has had to do it many times during his time building bows. He thought I had been lucky to have have had material so consistent and been that close in weight for that number of bows.
To test his theory, over the next couple of weeks I made a couple of bows with some of the old lam's. They came in at 2 & 3 #'s over before final sanding. Tracking the new flooring I found it was inconsistent, with a varience 0-8 pounds with the same lay up. I ended up putting that bamboo flooring on a spare bedroom floor where it looks good.