Thanks Ritchie for the mention, but I'm in no way an expert on the subject. I've made maybe a dozen of these styles in the last year. It's just where my bow making journey has taken me... Anyway, I agree with Badger's points. Anything too drastic in one spot is a nightmare, no matter how you intend to tiller it.
If you have a mild reflex deflex, you can more or less tiller it like normal just allowing a little more bend in the deflex area and a little less in the reflex area.
Anytime you add more than a couple inches you are taking a shot in the dark as to what you "expect" the tiller to look like. There's just too many variables to predict what the shape should look like, imo (unless you are very experienced and know what shape you want it to take to meet your requirements; Marc St Louis comes to mind). So you want to make sure your board/stave/lams are bending the way you want it before you induce R/D. I do this by very precisely measuring the thickness taper and making sure my width taper is spot on too. I know that it will bend the way I want it to because my taper is near perfect. If you don't want to precisely measure thickness taper or you are using a stave, you can spend the time at floor tiller and make sure it's bending near perfect before you glue the back on or heat in r/d. It is basically pre tillered before your glue up. Then tillering will consist of evenly taking off material from the entire limb to even it up and reduce to your intended weight, and letting the shape be whatever it wants to be. You did most of the work pre-glue up.
After breaking a few and having a few take a lot of set, this method has worked for me. The less I mess with the thickness taper the better the bow comes out.
I have broken a least a couple trying to get the "stiff" outers bending. Not a game I play anymore.
Oh and a precisely pre-tillered stave/board will bend more evenly when inducing r/d.
Hope this helps.