Different bows do get different approaches, sometimes just tweaks, but it does depend. This actually works REALLY well for me, but only after a lot of experiences with failures. Much better than floor tillering, which is what I did for years. I would almost ALWAYS end up with one soft spot somewhere in one limb and would end up building the weight and tiller around that spot, and far too often would end up with bows coming in underweight, or bad tiller and weight decreasing rapidly.
Since I have taken to using this method, along with faceted reduction, the "rough up and scrape smooth" controlled removal method, laying out the limb in sections, and the gospel that preaches never pulling the bow beyond the intended draw weight, I have not ruined one bow out of the last 30 or 40 during tillering. I used to finish about one bow out of three to intended specs before that. So it works for me.
It CAN be tedious, and there is a lot of prep time, followed by very slow removal of more material than I might face otherwise, and I often do a lot of controlled weight removal after I'm already pretty happy with the bend at brace. But, the minute I see those inner limbs just barely bend, I know I can get it just where I want.