Most of the damage I've seen in non fast flight bows is the string pulling down through the glass in to the string grove.. not actually cutting the tips off. Since the glass is all linier there, the addition of low stretch strings would put more force in to splitting the glass. A thicker string loop would certainly help in that case.
Micarta is a trade name and is all phenolic.. you know.. not all phenolic is Micarta, but all Micarta is phenolic.
G10 is technically a phenolic as well, but done with epoxy and fiberglass. Far superior in strength and lack of flexibility but can be hard on tools. Having said that, I find it far easier to file than typical phenolic. A very thin layer under any other material is all it would take to safe guard your tips.
When using antler, there are several things to consider when looking for trouble free overlays. I use moose exclusively because I can grind it very thin and get most of that pithy core ground off. I also soak it in acetone for a day or so to remove any fat that remains followed by a pre heat with a heat gun.. not so much to make it brittle. I then grind to a rough shape and thin to my desired size with 36 grit to give the glue something to hold to.
I no longer use CA glue to do any overlays as it leave a whiteish line and never trusted it for horn or antler anyway. I can't say that I've never had a problem with horn or antler, but at customer reqest, many thousands of bows (about 90%) get it and I can only recall problems with maybe 5 that were because of that media. Having said that, I'm sure it was more of a failure on my part than the antler itself. I also wouldn't consider it fast flight compatible on its own.. at least not for a glass bow.
BigJim