Sooooo, if I go buy a .025" thick piece of inconel, titanium, kryptonite, or whatever, and I have a sheet of this stuff sitting on my table, does that mean I can't bend it? After All, it has material properties that far exceed anything quoted by an epoxy manufacturer.
Let's put this into context:
The stock will flex to accommodate a .003" deviation in dimensions. (which is what 1.5mil works out to on both sides) No bedding is going to magically resist this when it's applied at maybe a .02" in film thickness by most who skin bed a stock. I surface inlets to generate a .05" film thickness and it will still distort. Sit and figure the tensile psi loading of a guard screw once. That is mechanical advantage in one neat little package. It will pull the thing together.
A very compelling argument has been made that to some degree the distortion is desireable. It's been proven at some level, although much more beta testing is needed to really validate it.
The stock will budge, the bedding will yield, and I'd bet a steak dinner the gun will shoot just fine. It's just duracoat which is nothing more than watered down tractor paint from Sherwin Williams. Polane T if I recall.
Good luck.