Good idea....slow and steady does it as TM is very soft and won't need much work to remove.
Just a heads up on the CA glue.....very toxic smelling stuff and the fumes actually affected my eyes by making them water therefore need to be doing this in a well ventilated place but not too much as you don't want to introduce dust or floating objects into the finish.
DB's thread mentions just 3 coats and as he is a master at doing this that may be so for him but was not the case for me. If you lay a fairly heavy wet coat it takes longer to set and cure but generally comes out more even however the open rosewood will soak up a decent amount on 1st coat. Tended to find that subsequent thinner coats were more fickle and dried in patches rather than an even finish where light sanding back often cut back to the bare FB. Towards the end I was using 1500 and that had too much bite and moved on to 2000 grit.
Best advice is to give it plenty of time to cure before sanding prior coats. From my experience this was at least a couple of days but that was during the mild winters we get in South East Qld and could take longer in colder parts of the country.
Once you have done a couple of coats you will have a better idea of how things are shaping up.