Snag. I agree. that is exactly what you do. The trick is to tiller so that the limbs are timed. This means that the top limb has to play a little catch up with the bottom limb so they both stop at exactly the same time. If the center of the bow is in the center of the grip then the shelf is above center. this places the arrow and the fingers above bow center line. Also above string center line. You have to tiller postive in order not to make the limbs look exactly the same at draw but to get them to stop at the same time. This starts the arrow out on its flight leaving with all the energy the bow limbs can impart. This cuts down on lost energy , vibration, shock ect and produces a faster cleaner arrow flight.
there is a misconception that the tiller measurements are the only indicator. Not true. That is a start point only.
God bless, Steve
God bless, Steve