This is the data sheet I was using:
http://simplexaero.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/T-88_TDS.pdf#:~:text=cure%20as%20low%20as%2035°F%20without%20reduction%20in,heat%20cure.%20BONDING%20WOOD%20WHITE%20OAK%20AND%20TEAK
Nice looking blank!! Gonna be a beauty!
I am still a beginner with this kind of segmenting myself...but, to what John T said, I have found that drilling any segmented blank with metal layers is fraught with trouble. That is always where my segments separate, at the metal to wood or metal to resin bonds.
Given how beautiful this blank is, I recommend adding some external structural support, to maximize the chances of success once you drill. What I did the last couple, was to glue on some of those fat popsicle/craft sticks on the outside, so that there was some additional support holding all the segments in place. I thought about wrapping that with something else, but I ended up just drilling with the craft stick outer layer only. It worked, and I was able to drill without anything separating. I've only done that twice now, though, and I have more experimenting to do. I think, also, that so far all of the blanks have been resins and metals, no wood yet...
One thing I have not yet figured out how to do though, is drill the metal layers on their own. I always seem to have some kind of problem trying that. So far, I've been trying to glue down or clamp down the pre-cut squares on their own. I've tried gluing them on the flat surface of a sacrificial piece of wood, and that really didn't work. I tried gluing and clamping, which was a bit better, but I seem to get a rim on the back side of the hole, which then requires extra work to work that out. Even when I drill real slow. I currently have mostly bradpoint bits, and I think that is part of my problem, so next time I get into segmenting, I intend to buy another set of drill bits that are not bradpoints, and see how that goes with the metals.
One thing I did see in a thread a while back, was someone drew out all the metal segments they wanted on each piece of metal, then drilled first, then finally cut up each piece. That, to me, seemed like a much better way to go about it, as you would then have a lot more metal surface area to clamp down or do whatever you needed to do to hold it in place properly while drilling. Still would need that sacrificial piece of wood, but, I think it would work better than what I had tried before.