The tiller is still a long way off - as said above, you definitely shouldn't be pulling it that far until it's absolutely perfect. It's gonna be taking lots of set and losing performance the whole time you're heaving it back beyond the necessary drawlength. The issues with that tiller should be visible at around 18" or so, which is where you should be stopping until it's pretty much flawless.
Your red lines show exactly where it's bending too much, and not enough. Take wood off both mid-limbs until the red lines you're drawing sit smack in the middle of the bow.
Mike's point about full compass longbows is true in some cases, but not always. Depending on how you want the bow to perform, how long you want it to last, what poundage you're after, what woods you're using and what the front profile looks like dictates the final tiller shape, in an ideal world. There's nothing wrong with having a perfect arc of circle tiller shape, provided it meets the particular bow's design brief.