Anyway, here is my lam-tapering method. Don't judge me by my garage, please.
I invented a little rocking table I usually set up on sawhorses. It consists of two 6 foot 2x4's glued and screwed together in the middle, and two 8 foot 2x4's on the outside. The long ones have a large carriage bolt and wing nut on each end so they can be loosened and tightened easily. When loosened, they allow the six-foot doubled up boards in the middle to move freely. When tightned the outside boards hold the inside boards very snug and square.
The outside boards are also braced crosswise at the bottom by two short 2x4s, screwed down with long construction screws. The short crosspieces have a hole in each with a tee-nut installed, and an eye bolt through the tee-nut.
The idea is that I can loosen each end and then adjust the height of the middle of the table on each end turning the eye bolts from underneath. The middle section can be tipped up, down, or flat and adjusted for any thickness of lamination.
Next, I installed wheels on my power hand planer. I wanted 4, but 2 turned out to work just fine. On a full length lam, I can smooth and thickness it after sawing, then tilt one end of the tape up and taper in several passes from middle to tip.
It's pretty handy. It's a little hard to taper two half laminations the same because you have to clamp it on the thick end. I sometimes have start with a few extra inches, drill a hole in the thick end and screw it to the table with a countersunk nylon nut so the planer will ride through without trouble. I can usually just fiddle with the tilt and height enough to clamp the back end of a longer lam with a c- clamp. With this set up, I could even start tapers halfway out the limbs. Sometimes, too, that e ends get roughed up a little because of how the planer tilts without the back wheels, but once the infeed plate at the nose of the planer is firmly up against the work piece, it's fine.
I can put down scrap pieces to protect the table, and produce my wedges and powerlams the same way, planing them down to paper thin at the ends to save time on the beltsander.
Anyway, as I said, not as precise, but very adjustable, and I can easily produce a lam that is 3/8 in the middle, 1/4" at each tip, and 5/16" halfway out as near as my caliper will measure.
Pics are coming. I'm on mobile, so bear with me......