Donald's on the right trail, but, since you've got it to 20" I'd shoot it a bit to determine where the best nocking point is and where the center of your hand's pressure is on the bow's grip. Use those points on your tillering tree- with a fulcrum where your center of hand pressure is. The pulley rope should come straight down as you draw the bow on the tree and the limbs shouldn't rock on the fulcurm as the limbs return to their braced postion. Looking in a mirror helps some folks but it just confusing me.
Since the limbs are constant width to the midpoints, the tiller should ideally be more ellipitcal than circular. i.e. more bending from mid-limb out. Judging by the set in the unbraced photo (assumming the limbs were straight...), it looks like they are stressed enough there already so I'd gingerly thin the fades and maybe the handle to get a longer draw length. Based on the set, I suspect it'll be a slow shooter if you can get it to the draw length you want. Given the short length, the set, the grub holes, and sap wood, I have doubts you'll get the 27"- 28" draw lenght.
Please post on how the grub hole filling holds up. Titebond creeps when stressed....
c.d.