Depends on lots of factors, but you can put in a surprising amount and have it work. However, I am not convinced that more equals better performance. There are diminishing returns. Here is my thinking and experience.
First, I will say that a little deflex goes a LONG way as far as eliminating problems, both with overstraining wood and with stability issues. I have pulled off some LARGE, high angle recurves by deflexing the handle a little. People were mocking me once about how big and stupid my recurves were, but that bow (boo backed BL, 64", 2" wide limbs, deflexed 2" to the deepest bit, and recurved back to 2.5" ahead of the handle with tips almost curved to 90 degrees. With string bridges6" down the limbs that bow was a screamer, baby-butt smooth draw, and dead quiet. I used a 10" kid's bike wheel rim as a form to steam bend the lams.
A Perry reflex/deflex that was pre-deflexed at the handle (look at how Marc. St Louis does it) rather than force-glued into reflex can take a LOT more than a R/D stave. But it sure is easy to just bring the limbs around with heat when you have a deflexed stave. Other rules still apply; a wide, flat limb and more parallel width profile help out a lot, skinny tips raise efficiency, a wild profile will not compensate for bad tiller or damaged wood, etc.. This design stores a lot of energy, so you need a lot of inner limb mass and the best belly wood you can get.
Also, as the profile curves increase, the bow has to be tillered differently. Big curves have to bend more, sooner by the handle, and have tighter radius toward the tips. The middle limbs bend a LOT in this design, and are easy to overwork. If they curve a little and bend to "straight", that might be just right, but if they curve a LOT and bend to "straight" that's likely too much, which means you really need the inner limb to do its share, but it's a tricky tiller and hard to see.
I cut my teeth making these with bamboo backs and boofloo or tropical woods, and rarely do them anymore. But, the only form I kept around is set up for about 2" deflex (or 1-1/2" if I shim the form) and 5" of reflex on a 68" bow. (I measure reflex from the deepest part of the deflex, so limb tips 3" ahead of the handle.) I lose 1" to 1-1/2" as the bow relaxes off the form (and BTW, TB III relaxes more than Urac used to). If I tiller well, I end up with tips about even with the handle or a half inch ahead. For me, this has been the best overall design compromise. I have made R/D's that started with tips a full 4" ahead of the handle before tillering, and they gave me fits.