Next, I'll show pictures before and after the uneven wood removal. I didn't have a square, so I just used a level. You can see if you look closely that the table top is level so when it's standing up perpendicular like that it should be square.
This picture is of it un-altered from the front view
And this is the same one un-altered from the opposite side. I just turned the table around to keep the background the same.
Those previous pictures were before I altered it, and these next two are after I altered it. I apologize that the two altered pictures seem to show the twist going one way in one picture than the other way in the next. I wanted to keep the same background view, so to get the picture of the twist from the opposite side, I just turned the table around instead of walking over there. I assure you it does throw off the alignment and pulls toward the weak side in both the cases of those last two photos, just like 4est Trekker previously discovered.
This is the altered from the front. The weak side is to the left in this picture
This is the altered from the back. The weak side is to the right this time due to turning the table around.
What I did was taper the limb by removing wood from only one side (refer to the next post for more explanation). What was surprising to me was how I couldn't really tell the alignment was off until I clamped it flat to the table. I could tell something was off, and because I was purposefully altering it I knew it was the alignment, but if I didn't know any better and this was happening on a real bow I might not have noticed this was happening, not unless I was watching carefully.