Yep, what Roy said. That's what I was getting at. And in accordance with the limb front profile picture you posted, the limbs shouldn't get thicker heading toward the tips. Perhaps a tiny bit in the last couple of inches if you're going to narrow them there to reduce tip mass, but not half of the limb. You run the risk of overworking the inner limbs, which is the worst place to induce set because a little bit of set there projects out to a lot at the tips.
Before I even put such a bow on the tillering tree, I have it evenly tapered in thickness from dips to tips... heck, to be honest, I have things tapered before glue up. It's not necessary, but it eliminates some hurdles that pop up on occasion.
As far as relative limb strength, yes, you will need to make the bottom limb weaker to balance them if you put the shelf 2" above bow center and shoot split finger.
If you make the bottom limb shorter, you might be ok with an even tiller, but I would let the tillering tree tell me exactly what it needed. Hold it on the tree and pull the string where you will while shooting it, and balance the strength of the limbs so the hook comes straight down the wall.