Using small cups and measured on a gram scale.
You might get a 15-20% drift at such weights, if not more. Tried that, didn't work, unless you have a very precise and expensive lab weight. I tested the hell out of this with both resins and silicones. Now I just calculate the volume ratios, and go by syringe scale.
Use same syringe sizes for both parts though, you want the scales to be uniform.
Room temps are relative, you don't have to keep them tight. Epoxy resins (crystal clear is one afair) usually like to jump into the oven for a 12 hour 60°C post-cure or such. OK, autoclave, but us plebs usually use ovens

I like casting in the winter or low temps in general, you get low humidity, no condensation, long setting times, less shrink, less bubbles. Works wonders for preparing silicone molds, though you have to wait a few days for it to set if you don't increase temp mid-way.
re:bubbles, did you measure the vacuum you're getting?
If the mold doesn't get filled well, vacuuming it might not give you a success - resin (especially highly viscuous) can withstand some pressure, and keep the air pocketed inside the mold. The expanding air needs to defeat that pressure to escape, and as it expands, the pressure inside the bubble drops.
Pressurizing it afterwards makes the bubble present, but microscopically small. It works, but IMVHO, that's an ugly method. Also, beware - if a pressure pot goes off at 4 bars, it can strip you off a vital organ or two. I try to avoid pressure casting, personally.
My guess is you should pre-pour the problematic parts before closing the mold, or rethink the way the mold is made.
Oh, and yea, good luck with the syringes! They make everything easier. Just... USE THEM ONCE XD
You're gonna start doing that anyway, when you dip the resin syringe into the catalyst, or the other way around, or your resin sets in 1/3 of the time because you introduced resin crystals from the previous batch with a dirty syringe

re: tacky, not tacky - in what order did you cast them? Did the first one came out tacky, or the second one?
The crystallization might get inhibited by a mold separator, silicone catalyst, or residue present in the silicone mold that got there when you made a cast from your master model. In this case, the first mold would suck these up, end up tacky, and leave the mold relatively clean for the second non-tacky one.
If the second pour was the tacky one, one of the resin's components might have gotten stuck in the silicone's chemical chains, and reacted with your pour. Silicone will readily take small particles of aromatic solvents into its structures, so it's a thing to watch out for. In such case, leave the mold in vacuum for a few hours.
Wash the silicone mold with a detergent, and use a compatible mold separator/barrier. PVA or wax in solvent are used professionally.