Art,
I admire your contribution, and skill, so your $ .02 has a pretty fair "present value" in today's market. LOL I'd like to hear more about your thoughts on how drawing on the tree differs from drawing by hand. I think it mostly involves the placement of the draw hook on the string. And the fact is really not practical to have much offset on stick or tree, due to the rotation phenomenon I mentioned. While I advocate it, predominantly because most bowyers seem to make their trees with a "cradle" versus a single point of contact and thus it works.
I on the other hand use the single point of contact. As such I can't really offset the draw hook much, or the bow will rotate off the tree if I don't have the tiller pretty close. I tend to place arrow pass closer to center, which help mitigate the need to offset of the draw hook as well. And I start shooting by hand early in the process (about 4" to 6" before full draw) to help compensate as well.
I think when folks have bows pull out of till from shooting, and some would advocate to turn their bow upper limb into lower, they've suffered from having built a bow best suited to the tiller tree's shooting style, versus the archer's.
All,
While my use of language may sound authoritative and convincing, I'd encourage you to regard my comments with the same skepticism as any other novice. My purpose is to have you consider the alternatives and ideas, rather than accpect my ideas. I've learned from experience, nothing beats one's own personal direct experience, in particular comments from others'.