As far as effects on the neutral plane, I tend to think there would not be too much. No matter how you glue up the lams, you still have the decidedly "unstretchy" bamboo backing causing just about everything inside it to be in compression. I agree that moving more stresses into the interior of the wood is what makes a Perry reflex perform better, and having two glue lines both under some shear stress would seem to work even better if nothing failed as a result. I would worry about having a glue line too close to the belly surface. After all, the belly is usually the weak link and putting it under shear stress in addition to compression stress might be its undoing. That is where I was coming from with thinking Type 2 might be preferable, there would be even less shear in that belly-side glue line in that instance, than if you glued it up straight or reflexed.
Since we are ultimately pulling all three lams back in one direction, gluing them all into reflex intially (Type 1) would theoretically result in the most stress at full draw which I suppose is what we want. However, since the neutral plane is the spot of no compression/tension stress, and this is usually near the bamboo backing glue line (from what I understand), then that is where you'd want to "bury" most of your additional stress (doen best with Type 2).
To summarize, heck if I know. Makes a good case for a selfbow though.