The reasoning behind letting the coats dry is so you cannot get a dry spot in the joint.
Applying glue, letting it gel then applying fresh glue would mean that the first just gelled layer could be removed (or part of it) when fitting the parts together. The dried layers of glue cannot 'come off'. All the layers do not need to be reactivated just the surface. This method of sizing with many coats of thin glue, drying inbetween and then applying the thicker final layer works perfectly.
Collagen glues contract as they dry and therefore wood to wood joints do not need high clamping pressure in fact it is counter productive. The key is close fitting, smooth surfaces to start with. Roughened surfaces trap air bubbles reducing glue saturation of the surface.
I like to test all these things for myself and it doesn't take long to glue up some test pieces. Try scraped smooth surfaces, 60 grit roughened surfaces, no sizing, thin glue, thick glue, clamps no clamps etc and then break them all. All in the name of experimentation and a bit of fun
It is well worth experimenting with the horn to core joint before going for the actual glue-up.
Yes you want to increase that angle in the tip bend or else the bow will stack early and not store as much energy as it could.