Are you asking this because you’re truly interested in if there’s a reliable method or for some other reason?
I have built at least 50 bows. Most of them took me just several hours as I don't even bother to sand them. The earliest handful took me days if not weeks and they are still my better bows. If you want pictures as a proof, how are you going to verify that I did not take pictures of someone else's workshop? Many people seem to have lost all sense of honor, trust, and integrity somehow. I live and die on my words, at least in my mind. And I am also quite good at telling whether or not a person is lying or not, by just reading his posts. I simply ignore liars and cheats, unless I am interested in their pathology for whatever reason.
As for the Woodbear's bow, it is much better than my best bows, but you said it was actually tillered by a master bowyer called Badger! I have no verified 170 FPS bow, as my release through the chrono is so terrible. I shoot the purchased fiberglass recurves through it, and get around 160 FPS only. Most of my good bows shoot around 150 FPS on a good day.
I am not against math and physics as tools, other than that I think they are better at destruction than at creation of life forms. Therefore I don't trust them in the matter of the meaning of life. They will eventually be used to make robots that can replace all master craftsman, artists, and even doctors. But they should not be allowed to dictate the meaning of human life.
Here I am mostly interested in getting ordinary language "principles" to achieve perfect tillering. I want them to have some explanatory powers to help us understand how bow making with natural materials works. I find the mantra and the mass principle quite useful but not very satisfying. Not good enough at giving me the illusion of deeper comprehension, at least not anymore.
Bow making is just a hobby for me. All I want is to be able to talk about bow making, using just ordinary language words but still intelligently enough to get better at it somehow, without the need to learn anything with a stiff learning curve.