I don't jump through those hoops... powerlams, multiple thin lams, or pedestals, and I never have anything lift. After the pieces are fit together as well as I can get them, I groove all gluing surfaces with a fine tooth toothing plane blade, just held by hand like a scraper and worked until the grooves are full depth of the teeth(they're actually very shallow). Run the blade lengthwise down the entirety of both gluing surfaces so all grooves run parallel with the bow's length. Takes like 30 seconds. Then use Smooth On ea40 to wet both surfaces, clamp with moderate pressure, with a shop light nearby for warmth. Whether it bends some into the fades and handle or not, doesn't matter. Quick. Simple. Never comes loose. Impossible to starve a glue joint this way.
Make sure the epoxy is adequately mixed. If not, that can cause delams no matter what methods are used.
I use the toothing plane on the bamboo backing, it's actually how I finish thinning it down, and overlays as well. No more glue joint concerns.
The toothing plane is one of my favorite tools in the shop, but if you don't want to spend the money on a whole toothing plane, and just want a blade to prep gluing surfaces by hand, you can sometimes find them on the big auction site.