There have been a lot of guys that get frustrated having draw weight vary from one bow to the next using the same stack height and similar materials. What really throws you off is having a lot of tiller difference on a set of limbs that has to be dealt with.
Of course you always need to take great care in milling your laminations as closely as possible, and check your total stack heights prior to lay up. But typically it’s our glass variation that throws things off.
Unfortunately the strength of the glass and thickness varies from one batch of glass to the next. Not a lot, but enough to throw your draw weight off by 6-8 pounds pretty easily. And if the tiller is off too, it can result in building another set of limbs.
I’ve seen glass as much as . 004- .006 difference in thickness from one end to the other in 6’ lengths. But typically they are fairly close from end to end, and vary more from one piece to the next one. This is especially true mixing up glass you have had in stock, with a new batch you just bought. Or from one end of a roll to the end of the roll can vary a lot using Bear Paw glass. And one roll to the next can vary a lot.
I did a little film clip here showing a method I’ve used that helps a lot on consistency in limbs draw weight and tiller match without sanding the glass at all prior to lay up.
Sanding glass perfectly in a drum sander has its own issues, and I wouldn’t recommend it. I played with that years ago and it’s not worth the time and frustration.
Hope this little trick helps you. Kirk
https://photos.app.goo.gl/9HtC12heNSu9w8xU8