Like Bubbles, I want to understand the question better. In my experience, and having mentally cataloged the experience of many others for the past 20 years, the question you posted, with the results you listed, actually means mistakes were already made.
First, The whole point of a Perry reflexed bow is that it will take less set than a selfbow. The entire paradox is that by reflexing it you actually relieve strain. So, if a Perry bow takes 2" of set, the bowyer either over-strained the design/materials anyway, tillered badly, or something like that.
In real life, assuming high tillering skill, and assuming the limbs physically weigh about the same, the Perry bow should take less set, hold the profile, and maintain the high level of energy storage. So the comparison would be between a Perry bow with 1.5" of reflex, and a selfbow sith 2" of set. OR, they could have comparable set, the selfbow with 2" of stringfollow, the Perry bow with tips even with handles, BUT the Perry bow with 20% less limb mass (figure grabbed out of the air).
R/D bow especially seem to shoot great forever for me, and I have seen no real indication that Perry reflexing contributes to shorter bow life overall, BUT, the devil IS in the details. It is harder to execute a Perry reflexed bow properly as far as tiller and limb profile.. Glue lines and wood selections cause all kinds of new quandrys and issues, etc. So, for simplicity, maybe the self bow,