What John said is right, laying it out right is important. As I look at that pics, I am wondering if you thinned out the boo enough. If you back with boo that is too thick or not tapered at all, then you don't keep a good ratio of bellywood to backing, and it plays heck with tillering, adds to sudden breaks or delaminations too.
I took that boo/ipe (that i mentioned i hinged it in the fade in your first post) over to Sam Harper's place this weekend to see what he thought. I was just going to chalk it up to another kid's bow. He a good idea i am trying to use to fix it.
You could go ahead a tiller out the hinge, don't worry about how light it gets, then make it a tri-lam. theoretically if you put on a parrallel at that point, it shouln't change your tiller much at all. my boo/ipe, is now a boo/ipe/boo tri-lam. i used engineered boo on the belly so i could adjust the tiller if needed. top limb if done, and the bottom limb is drying now. from what i can tell it definately fixed the hinge, and now i have the weight back (with the added benefit of maintainng low mass as the boo belly is so light)...just an idea, you might try if you are really wanting to keep a hunting weight bow, plus you could try to fix that twist during the glue up, instead of tillering it out.