Del. Your right. You can get any tiller shape with any front view profile. The question I ask is, which tiller shape will give me the best possible performance with a particular front profile. I think what's getting overlooked here, is that initially this bow was 68" in length (I'm assuming it's the same bow). Early on when he was first tillering the bow, maybe had it drawn to 12 inches or so, he asked how the tiller was looking. I and a few others said that at 68" with parallel limbs, he should shoot for a more elliptical tiller. I believe that was good advice based on the bows parameters. At 68 inches and parallel limbs (assuming a 28" draw), when the bow is bending close to the handle, you are spending stored energy throwing a lot of wood forward. Add to that, a dense heavy wood. If the bend begins farther from the handle (elliptical), you are spending less energy because you are moving effectively, shorter limbs which are liter. The bows length and dense wood allows, or maybe suggests you do this. The bow ended up being 60 inches. That changes the equation a bit. You now have to get the wood close to the fades working to even out the strain, and you are working with shorter liter limbs to boot. I think a slight width taper from handle to mid limb on this bow MIGHT add a bump in performance for the reasons discussed, but we really start to split hairs. It's an academic debate. Interesting none the less.