Hmmm, well, seems to me a bow can be 'properly tillered' while stressing all bending parts equally, OR it can be properly tillered if the outer limbs are caused to bend a little less, or more, for whatever reasons we deem necessary.
Does 'properly tillered' mean tillering a bow to a predetermined measurement at brace, say, 1/8" positive, regardless of unstrung profile and differences In limb shape? Or does it mean something other?
I know what symmetry IS. But when and why should symmetry matter in bow making? If a bow's lineal measurements are identical on either side of the centerline, it is symmetrical in that sense, but what if that bow has one limb straight and the other has deflex as viewed from the side, should symmetry be maintained in its tiller profile? If not, then what should guide our efforts?
I'm still not convinced timing is unimportant or that all are 'timed' because the string stops both limbs from moving at
approximately the same time. Timing to me is something different. It's more dynamic. Good timing is causing the limbs to 'give' to the string fulcrum equally, so that it, and the arrow nock, comes straight back perpendicular to the handle/shelf. If one limb is stronger than the other, NOT at brace, but relative to the bow hand and string hand fulcrums, it will flex less, and the string fulcrum and arrow nock will move toward the stronger limb, relative to the shelf. Anything more than a wee bit is less than good timing. Imho.