Del,
.... I would assume that I would need to fix that hinge before going any further. But if I just remove move and go to #50..
You don't need to "assume"....
I specifically said " in which case, remove a little wood (from everywhere except the weak point) to try and correct the tiller and repeat."
Meaning you fix the problem, pull again and stop if its uneven.... if it looks ok, carry on pulling to your target weight.
Putting it another way.
If you see a problem, you stop pulling and remove wood in the appropriate places to cure the problem and try again... if there is still a problem before hitting your target weight you stop again and do more work.
Never pull over target weight.
Once it is even and you are pulling target weight... you will doubtless be short of target draw length. so you remove wood evenly and repeat the process.
An example:-
Yesterday a bloke came to me with a warbow that was too heavy for him... he wanted 100# @32"
I put it on the tiller and pulled it to 100# it was at 27"
Tiller wasn't perfect so I took off a few thick spots and took the corners off the rather square back and tried it again...
100# at about 27 1/2"
lower limb was a little stiff in the middle so I took a little extra off there) but generally took wood evenly off the belly giving 100# @ 28" with the tiller looking better.
Then eased off the tips, took more off all along the belly, 100# @ 29"
Finally I cleaned it up with a scraper, he said it felt much better and was more comfortable in the hand.
Checked it on the tiller. It looked good and was about 100# at 30# which was considered close enough, as it would probably settle a bit and he was going to sand it too.
Hope that makes sense.
Del
PS. Spent 4 hours doing that, he left me some nice Yew for my trouble