Brock, syncronized limbs return to brace at precisely the same instant, but aren't necessarily sync'd in movement or appearance througbout the draw.
Suppose unbraced one limb has deflex and the other has reflex... this bow can be tillered to bring the nock of the arrow straight back without wanting to tip in the hand, but the limbs won't be mirrored images of one another... and won't look as if prescribed to a tiller measurement 'standard' at brace. So too with a bow that has one limb longer than the other. Its limbs travel different distances, one in a tighter radius than the other, but need to return to brace in sync. The Japanese Yumi bows take this to an extreme, but the same applies to bows with much less difference between limbs.
I'm afraid many folks believe tillering to mean only 'to cause the limbs to bend in nice even arcs'... and nothing more. Maybe they'll also cause all of their bows to show 1/4 or 1/8" positive tiller, and then assume they're well-tillered/sync'd, but I've found that's not always the case. It's my opinion that limbs should be 'tillered' to bring the nock of the arrow straight back and send it straight forward. The only way that's going to happen is with limbs that apply equal tension to the string... relative to our grips on handle and string... and when that is our destination, and our compass that steers our efforts, the result is a perfectly tillered bow, regardless of what its brace height measurement are... and vary they will. Those measurements aren't completely useless however. They can be taken after the bow is tillered, and before shot-in. Then used as reference during shooting in and early life to reveal any tiller shift that might occur. As I mentioned before, those measurements should be the final product of our efforts, not a factor that at all steers them. I don't take those measurements until the bow is completely tillered and ready to be shot at full draw... and then I take the tape measure to the bales with me to make occasional checks to ensure the tiller isn't changing as she's shot in... which as a general rule, it never does.
Longrifle, yes, a perfectly tillered bow is, among other things, perfectly 'timed'.