Dimensions are exact to a 32nd of an inch. (way it looks on the tape anyway, I don't have access to either a dial or a caliper or I definitely would check it.) I use a jig for consistent thickness and a "jig" of sorts, if you can call it that, for width. Both pieces of wood looked identical, same thickness of rings, same color, exc...
"I have backed bows with linen after I tillered them, and the weight did not change. But that is just my experience."
Ya, I can second that. I just linen backed a "ambush style" bow after tillering, and it did not raise the weight. (I think, it was supposed to come out at 55#, and came out at 55# anyway, but I didn't weight it before I backed it). This time applied the backing before bending it at all. I think that just how the belly is said to compress and get set, and in effect become permanently compressed, I bet you the back of the wood also gets permanently stretched out a bit. So maybe the linen stopped it from stretching, and forced all the bend to be compression, thus raising the weight from forcing the belly to compress more than it would normally?