Stick, I'm not sure there is an "advantage" to a tri-lam, it's just another way to do it.
Theoretically it might hold the shape off the form better (I think it does, less "spring-back" as you release clamps, but less "Perry reflex" benefit, as well?), two stage glue-ups give you more time to mess with glue and alignment, and you might be able to utilize a lighter core, etc. but I can't see any real differences.
The only thing I THINK I saw a difference with was when I was using a lot of bamboo flooring. That stuff was developing a reputation for taking set, sometimes lots, but never seemed to really hinge or fret. I started doing two stage glue-ups when I went to TB III, and gluing up belly and core in the form in one stage, then back to the same form for the backing SEEMED to make the bows take less set.
On the other hand, that MIGHT have been about the time I started to have a clue what I was doing.
On that note, has anyone actually tried the method Baker theorizes for laminated bows, where he suggests that gluing up two thin lams in "extreme exaggerated reflex", then gluing each consecutive lam into less and less reflex SHOULD make a laminated bow shoot faster? I never have, because my laminations aren't that thin, and I can get the profiles I want with two or three lams.