"some have suggested that they try to get the bow down to intended draw weight and tiller from there'
I think I do read a misconception in here. The idea is not to get the bow DOWN to intended draw weight. The idea is not to PULL it any harder than final draw weight while you work in the tiller.
Imagine I rough out, say, an ash flatbow: 68" long, 2" wide limbs, side taper starts halfway out the limbs, narrowed handle about 1-1/2'' thick, and I chopped the limbs essentially 1" thick the whole way down. I want the finished bow to pull 50 lbs at 28".
Now, I know from experience that 1" thick limbs are too thick, WAY too thick for a whitewood flatbow. Might work as a starting point for a narrow yew bow, but not ash with a stiff handle. At this stage I could place the tips on bricks, stand on the handle, and bounce on the thing. It's a BEAM, not a bow. It would pull dang near 200 lbs at full draw. More importantly, if you just forced a string on it at a 6" brace height, even just THAT might break the bow outright. It will certainly take a ton of set and form massive hinges. If you pulled it, it to full draw, it's going to break.
So, INSTEAD, what I'm gonna do is this. I'm going to grab one tip and the handle, rest one tip on the floor and give it a little push/pull with my body weight. It'll likely feel like I'm trying to bend a fir 2x4. So, I know it is way too stiff. I'm going to immediately remove some belly wood, so I rasp all the belly surface of both limbs and keep an eye on the thickness, trying to keep it even all along.
After a couple of passes, I try again. Still too stiff. Repeat. I'm approaching, say 3/4" thickness now. Next time I do the floor tiller thing, I can feel it bend a bit. THIS is the MOMENT. Basically, from this point on, I will never pull on the stave or bow with more than 50 lbs. I put the bow on the tree with the long string, and pull that string down with 50 lbs of force and NO MORE!
The problem is that a lot of guys will at this point want to see the bend, so they pull it harder. If you do that, esp. on a notched tillering stick, you run the risk of causing the bow to take set. Not just set, but set at a hinge (because the whole limb is too stiff, but some parts WILL be stiffer than others and the bend will migrate to the weak spots). If you pull it with 50 lbs and the bow doesn't even move, what have you lost? It didn't hinge, or even bend much, so, no harm done.
I go back to rasping the belly evenly. One pass each limb (I mark the whole thing up with a dark crayon, then rasp off all the marks.) Check it again on the tree, with ONLY 50 lbs of weight. Eventually, the limbs start to bend, but only one or two inches. Regardless, you now adjust the tiller. Say the tips move only one inch, but all the bend is on one side. So, do one pass with the rasp on the stiffer limb. Check again. etc..
Let the weight pull you out to full draw while you tweak the limbs into the correct bend.