Hmmm.
All the following is just my opinion... feel free to throw tins of tuna at me
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All well and good saying the right tip looks stiff,
but if it started out with reflex then it's already bending as much as the other tip.
Its tricky to measure the deflection at a point.
Maybe tape a bit of arrow shaft or some such to the limbs at 10" from the tip, extending right out to the tip* (mark on the shaft where the tip reaches).
Measure the gap between shaft and tip at unstrung, braced and drawn.
That way you'll see which limb tip is actually flexing most.
Or maybe tape a bit of stiff card at the 10" point extending along the far edge of the limb (against the wall), you could draw the tip curve on it.
This also illustrates why it's better to have your tiller rig with the bow fixed, you can chalk the bow curve onto the wall and see how it looks, at various deflections.
*Tape it down solid at the 10" point only so that is the reference. Might be easier to tape it to the side of the bow, maybe flatten the shaft so it sits down tight and solid at that point.
The test may show nothing or be too inconsistent, difficult to measure, but it would be interesting to see.
Alternatively stick strain gauges every 3" and wire it all up to an umpteen channel chart recorder
Failing that, weaken the right tip until it breaks, then go back a bit
Del