I had some matched billets that I needed to splice, one billet had twist in three different directions so I cut the splice to level the back of the first section of twist. Boy did I get a sloppy cut on my bandsaw, I had several large gaps when I tried to fit the two billets together.
I have talked to people who were afraid to try to splice billets together for fear that they would mess up the cut.
A splice cut doesn't have to be too precise if you have a heat gun. On this sloppy cut I heated the cut prongs to the "I can't touch them" stage, fitted them together without glue, put three C clamps om the splice and torqued them down, when they cooled, I had a perfect fit.
All the old guys already know this tip so I posted it for the new guys. I drew my splice on a piece of paper first and glued the pattern to each billet, the example in the picture is on slats for a future bamboo osage bow. I just noticed one of the slats is a salvaged limb from a broken bow that already had a glued-up splice in it. Bamboo covered up this extra splice on the back and a glued-on handle covered it up on the belly.