I recently was fortunate to swap for a longbow made my MR Hamilton. I found a section of the Traditional Bowyer's Encyclopedia online where there is a great chapter on him.
I know nothing about his "Scorpion" but, have heard they performed well. It is an absolutely beautiful bow. You can see from the finish and details the work he describes putting into each bow is there.
In the article on him, he goes into some depth on his design development. He worked with the Marines at 29 Palms and apparently used the computers to help with his design work (used the barracks toilet lids for curve design).
He did some testing. Made one bow with Trapezoid limbs, another square and the third with reverse trapping. When he tested them, the normal trap had the least cast, the square next and reverse trapping performed the best. I had a Centaur that was "reverse trapped" to reduce weight and it outperformed the other 2 I had. In reading the description H Lee Robinson has on his website (Protege Bows, Keep It Simple Archery), he has incorporated reverse trapping to maximize performance. I am the proud owner of his TGS #1 (TradGang Series) and it is a performer, fast, smooth and dead in hand, just as he describes.
I have no idea what sort of performance increase reverse trapping can provide. I expect it certainly depends on the construction and materials used but, I agree, it certainly looks cool and from looking at my 2 reverse trapped bows, it doesn't take much.
Might be something worth looking into.