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I think the reason that there does not seem to be a consensus in this thread on what the best profile is, is because it doesn't exist. I don't believe that there is one layout that is the best in all situations. For a bow to maximize its potential for its intended purpose, the wood, layout and tiller need to compliment eachother. Sometimes it may mean keeping the bow wider in the inner limbs to avoid taking set when they are under a lot of strain and tapering down to avoid a sluggish bow. For another design, wide inner limbs may not be necessary and a parallel limb will give you a better performing bow. Its all a balance between aesthetics, performance and durability. And if I'm wrong and there is one profile that is best in all situations, I hope we never prove it, it would get pretty boring seeing everyone make the same thing in different lengths over and over.
I've always made my bows tapered from the fades to the tip(just to distinquish it from Dels). I would call them spear shaped. There is taper all the way down but not even taper. That's just looked right to me. I only started leaving the outers a little wider when I was recurving them. It seemed to make them a little more stable. As for tiller, I have this hazy picture in my brain of what a nice bend is and I just try to make that. It's just somewhere between bending too much in the fades and whip tillered. As long as both sides are the same I'm happy.