Once you start using a straight taper wedge and lengthen it, you will never go back to short wedges again unless building a very short bow. The longer lean wedges push the working portion of the limb out further, and eliminates a hinge point often associated with shorter steeper pitched wedges.
Milling your wedges straight at 12” in length, and then pushing them into reflex in the form as you lay up the limbs does amazing things for your preload on the limbs at brace, and effects the dynamics of the draw cycle. You can build 3 different limb lengths for different length bows without loosing the performance you have built into your limb design keeping the tip notch in the same location, and just altering the wedge length, and stop location at the limb butt.
Kirk