On the "warbows" I have made I have aimed for a completely even bend and I like to get it even e arly one and keep it even to avoid getting localised set. I think this gets about the maximum performance per weight/length and it's easy! My feel is that this may have been the approach taken by bowyers of old. If it is easy and repeatable and make sense from a "comercial production" point of view it may have been used for mass producing warbows. This perhaps explaines why Ascham talked about whip tillering a bow once shot in. Obviously bowyer hadn't.
Anyway, I like to tiller the bow to an absolutely even bend at brace height, perhaps leaving the handle slightly stiff. Once the bend is even at brace height the bow can be worked back, keeping the bend even (still checked at brace height) and working to draw weight. Working the bow back at say 20 to 50 pulls per inch, keeping the bend even, avoiding weak and strong spots, pulling after every wood removal with scraper and file, keeping the bow basically looking like a finished bow ready for final sanding gives me the weight I want, the bend I want and minimal set. If the bow is just slightly too powerfull taking the bend a little more into the handle can make it easier to pull and drop the weight just that little bit without re-touching the imbs themselves.
On a laminated bow I basically pre-tiller the belly which makes life a lot easier later on. I avoid long string tillering as it can really throw you off. Get it cut out and shaped right, get it just about evenly bending floor tillering and get it to a slightly low brace height and even bend as soon as possible seems to work for me.
One thing I did find out today is that diamond honing paste on a leather as used for fine sharpening blades works a real treat on getting a mirror finish on horn and well as finely sanded Ipe.
Mark in England