My thoughts:
The initial brace is exciting to me, because it is risky. Honestly, it is a rush. Get is too strong, and you have a 65 pound bow, without realizing it. Here comes some set.
I have been considering setting aside my "luggage scale", and building by feel. But I would use my bows already built to check how an upper 40's bows feels compared to a 55# bow.
Wonder where that would lead me. I can tiller a bow to a pound or two, and I like working the numbers. Likewise, tuning arrows is rewarding ( I tell my technology friends I reload, but with with wood).
I am with George T: build it, tiller it, shoot it in. let the bow sweat, meaning strung for four hours. Then check tiller. sand. shoot a few dozen. check tiller. As a newbie, six years in, I need time, and extra wood,to sand paper it home.