I've made so many lever bows that my experience has taught me how far to reduce a lever to just before it starts to bend. I got it down to a science. I have learned just how much thicker the lever needs to be than the thinnest part of the working limb. As I stated before I have done em both ways before,n my personal preference is to leave em stiff,but reduce them right to the point before they wood start to bend. And it doesn't matter what wood I use,my simple lil formula works for any wood because its based on the thickness of your thinnest part of the working limb. I've used osage,hophornbeam,elm,blacklocust,red oak boards,dogwood,rosebay rhododendron,hackberry,and who knows what else I'm forgetting off the top of my head. And a smooth transition can be had from working limb to lever without being bulky and excessive in mass. Not knowing how much to take off is hogwash..it just takes several to make with careful observation and documentation to know and figure it out. Its called experience
I should do a build along on a Molly one of these days and expose all my lil tricks n secrets on how to get to an optimum lever. Soooo...how much ya gonna pay me guys to do it