agreed that the further out on the limb, the thinner or narrower it needs to be, but this does not necessitate that the bend radius should increase to keep the strain consistent. On a pyramid bow, the width narrows, and with a more parallel width limb, the thickness tapers.
I guess I just cannot see how the common advice to prefer circular or more elliptical is helpful. Strain is dictated by thickness, and an equally strained crossection will bend more if it is narrower, and less if it is wider.
I have found that closely monitoring where along the limb, that the set begins to show, is much more telling than aiming for a particular shape of bend.
Nothing wrong with the circular tiller of the pyramid, and it seems the same shape (without the non-working handle section) is also commonly advised for the more parallel width ELB type.
Is there something about energy transfer or arrow speed that makes one tiller shape more preferable over another?