Nothing worse than starting out with twisted limbs right out of the form on a glass bow.
Ive had a few twist up on me back when I was laminating plywood for forms and used angle iron on the bottom and edge banding on the top after getting it straightened out. Sealing them good with shellac helps a lot too.
Getting them straight is pretty easy. But getting a twist out of a form is damn near impossible and have it hold up in a hot box. Adding all that steel makes them heavy and hard to handle too. I had one that I used angle iron to hold it straight , and a brace in a vise to hold a slight twist straight while using heat strips. But I finally built a new form using 1.75” LVL material.
Btw… building forms from LVL material works excellent. But keep the full thickness and do not sand down the factory surface or it will move on you. Just a heads up on that fact.
So is it that your bows are 1.75” or the press is wider that your materials?
I pretty much use 1.75" materials on all my bows except my 1 pc Flatliner longbow. I built a new form for that one not long using 1.75" LVL and center up the 1.5" glass and lams and heat strips. i used a router on each side of the form in spots 1/8" deep across from each other leaving 1.5" centered, and use zip ties to hold them in place in the center of the form when airing up the hose..... Trust me... i tried milling an LVL to 1.5" when i first started using the stuff for forms. There is no keeping it straight or from twisting either.
These thing are built perfectly straight under pressure when laminating them. When you remove material from one side, it takes tension off one side and moves.
Its really much like milling any material.... Take a beautiful perfectly straight piece of S4S lumber say 6-8' wide and run it through the table saw.... Now look down the edge. 9 times out of 10 your two 3-4" pieces will no longer be perfectly straight.... Why? because you have relieved the tension in the grain that was holding it straight.... Same thing with a thickness planner on 4/4 , 6/4 , or 8/4 stock. You start out with a perfectly flat board, plane it on one side an 1/8", and now your board has a cup in it end to end.... You can either plane the other side equally to flatten it back out by equalizing the tension, or use moisture and weights to straighten it out again. then seal it after its dry.
I suppose if you planed an LVL both sides and brought it down slowly watching for straightness. it's possible it could be done. i've never tried it. All i know is that the factory LVL material is pretty darn stable if ya don't mess with it on the thickness.
The only way i've had decent luck with laminating plywood forms is using thick hardwood edge banding on the bottom and laminated edge banding on the top. But.... it's still wood. and wood moves with variable moisture content. Best bet is just build TD bows with shorter limb forms... LOL