I'm fairly new here at the Bowyer's Bench, and I have no idea what profile the traveling caul is, but if the limbs have no taper to them, you may end up with too much mass and stiffness in the tips, which may overwork the inner limb, slow the bow down and transfer handshock back to the handle. That's theory/conjecture on my part though, because I've never actually done it. I've tapered all of mine... to some degree.
The thing is, it will be impossible to taper them, or remove any material in thickness to affect the tiller once the blank is glued up with glass on the front and back. The only way you could change tiller on the bow at that point would be to alter the width taper and/or remove material by shaping the limbs trapezoidal or something similar... and those effects would be minimal.
Glass bows need the bulk of the work done(work that will ultimately affect the bow's tiller/action) done prior to glueup. So a few of the boo lams really should be tapered beforehand. You could send them to me and I'd taper them for you as I'm set up to quickly and precisely do so, but I have no idea what it would cost for you to ship them all the way here(Pennsylvania). It may not be worth it for you. Let me know though if it's something you'd like to consider.
With glass entombed laminated bows, the total amount of taper in the limbs largely determines the strung and drawn profiles, and how the limb works as its drawn. Most of my laminated glass/wood longbows have somewhere in the neighborhood of .003" - .0035" total taper per running inch of length. That's .096 - .112" total overall taper in the length of the limbs of a 64" bow. Small changes here can make quite noticable differences in how the bow looks, draws, and works.
For your reference, the last r/d longbow that I made here a couple weeks ago had these specs:
64" long
50# @ 28"
Overall Butt Thickness of .390" including the glass.
Total Overall Taper of .0035/1"
I used .050 clear Bo-Tuff glass on the back and belly.
16" riser from fadeout to fadeout
Moderate d/r profile
1 1/4" wide at the fades, with a straight taper to the tips
Trapezoid limb cross section
The wood lams were Wild Cherry
Hope this helps