So, I still think it's a good attempt, and don't let it get you down! I love what you are doing, and I'm excited for you to keep getting this stuff spot on. And, REMEMBER, everybody messes up bows. Don't take this as critical, just constructive criticism. BUT, I do see several things that MIGHT have done this to you..... Overall you were simply asking too much of the wood, but here is why.......
First it's oak. Red oak varies a lot in density and quality, and while it is FINE wood, it isn't excellent and gets recommended for availability more than anything. If I was making an oak pyramid bow I expected to shoot 60 LBs at 28", I'd have started with 3" wide, not 2". At 60 lbs, it needed to be longer, or wider, or less strained.
Second, you CANNOT simply slap BIG recurves on a pyramid style bow and expect it to work well. The pyramid design (consistent triangular side taper and essentially even thickness, creating circular tiller) is, by definition, a straight limb bow. Recurves alter the entire set up by changing where, how, and when leverage is applied during the draw. If you do this again with another board, do the thickness of the limbs to a good starting point, but leave the sides parallel out to, say 2/3 the limb length before you taper to points. Then, you can tiller from the sides a bit.
Third, That bow is pretty short at 65" (not for a recurve, but for oak), and since the board was pretty narrow that cost you. Look at your third pic and visually divide each limb into four sections according to length, from the handle outward (0-25% , 25-50%, 50-75%, and 75-100%). See how you have very little set down by the fades, but more in the third section (50-75%), just below the recurves? You needed more width there and in the 25-50% section.
Fourth, those recurves are HUGE. I actually want to congratulate you on getting them in there Now, I make some huge recurves, and I love them, but if I go 25% of limb length (like you did here), and over 45 deg angle, I usually deflex the handle or the limbs at the handle. This is mostly to benefit stability, but obviously helps reduce limb strain. I have flipped the tips an inch or two on many a pyramid bow or flatbow, but that was just too much draw weight, and too much curve.
Finally, See on your first pic how the lower handle is fatter than the upper handle? That's tipping your bow on the cradle of your tillering tree, which is why you though the upper limb was weaker. I eventually learned to use all kinds of shims, teeter-totters, and clamps to avoid that. You are tillering toward the bow's balance point in your hand, not just the handle, or the middle...