Jesse,
timing to me is when both limbs return at the same time but not necessarily together depends on the wood's character of lack of it.
Good tiller is when each part of the limb is doing its share of the work but yet working harmoniously with the other limb.
There are times (character bows) when the tiller may appear off but, nevertheless, the tiller is right for that particular bow...different limb entry points in the handle, one limb reflexed or deflexed, the presence of knotted areas which should not bend much in relation to the rest of the limb,etc....Here well timed limbs may not end up in the same place relatively but that is ok.
Let's take the situation where one limb is reflexed and the other is not. The reflexed limb needs to bend just as much as the one that is not reflexed. It will stop higher than the other...timing good...tiller good but appears off.
With flawless staves, a good tiller means the limbs will be timed properly.
Tired now. Not sure I am getting my points across.
Thoughts?
Jawge