Glenn has a good point. It is possible to have a node so humped up and stiff that a belly lam ends up very thin, and then, since the wood is harder than the bamboo, but you have removed it, the bow can hinge at the thin spot, even if the limb overall seems thick enough.
I avoid this by making the bamboo as consistent as possible between the nodes, or have as consistent as possible a taper. For instance, if you are making a backing that is not supposed to be thickness tapered and the calipers tell you 1/8" between the nodes at the middle, 1/8" just off the node to the right, but 7/32" just off the node to the left, it will probably mess with your tiller. I try to get as much of the "flat" between the nodes consistent as possible, then let the nodes be what they are, but as small a bump as possible.