Hey Willie. So, I do this differently today than I did as little as 10 years ago. Just an evolutionary thing that has worked for me. Most of my tillering is done from floor tiller to 15 inches or so. I want the floor tiller to be good enough to go to low brace if possible. Then I fret over the brace shape getting it right. From there keep the shape good out to around 15 inches, an inch at a time, all on the tiller stick. Once at 15 inches with near perfect tiller (as good as I can get it) I take it to the tree and exercise and weigh it at 15 inches. It has never been pulled beyond that. If at 15 inches it is say 40 pounds, and I am shooting for 50, I am 15 pounds heavy or so. Scrape where it needs it. I will start getting the fades to work a bit as well. Then check the tiller on the tree at 15, and then 16 inches and weigh it again at 16. 40 pounds at 16 inches, I am 13 pounds heavy or there'bouts. Repeat the scraping and check again going to 17 inches. 40 pounds at 17 inches, I am 10 pounds heavy. I just keep inching upwards in draw length until I am at 27. At 25 or 26 inches I will hit target weight usually, and it settles in at 50.
I believe this stresses the wood less than the alternative. Making weight is rarely an issue because your not doing much shaping toward the end. That has all been done early on. The last 10 inches is just even wood removal with sanding to finish it out. Never had a hinge just show up late in the game.
Lastly, I don’t claim this is a better way, nor do I claim to have invented anything new. It’s just what I do.