X2 what Dave said. Never had TB3 fail, and you get used to the glue up and it goes quickly.
I made my lams .150” thick and that would get me in the roughly 45# range (IIRC) at 28” on a 66” bow 1.5” wide with 12” riser. That’s with hickory back, hickory core, and ipe belly. But that’s also with black ipe, that’s extremely dense. Obviously the design you use, as well as the materials will change all that. Also small changes in stack thickness can cause large be increase in weight.
I have two of the same design both 12” riser 66” one .420 stack is 34-35#, .480 stack is nearly 50#
Another 18” riser 66” bow .420 stack is ~45#.
So you can see small changes can be huge.
I dealt with this by making numerous of the same design and only changing the stack slightly, or the length slightly and so on, then used the data to create a chart to give some idea where I needed to be with the stack. Also I would err on the lighter side because a too light bow can always find a home, but no one really wants the 68# mistake.
I don’t think I have the chart anymore, but also it only really works if you have the same belly, core and backing material. I cut lots of lams from the same boards so that everything was as consistent as possible. If I changed belly material, I would just make a guess about how that would effect weight.. In general, denser belly wood will increase draw weight, so you could guess that you might gain or lose a couple pounds going from one ipe board to another ipe board based on density. But going from ipe to yew, or Osage? Forget making any kind of accurate guess.
Is all this worth it? Maybe not. I did it because I had a lot of time, and it was cheap. And also I’m way better at engineering than I am at tillering, so it made sense for me. You could leave extra thickness on the belly lam, and tiller to target weight, but that’s just not how I personally chose to do it.