J.F. Miller, you sir are a man after my own heart. Your view on tiller, timing, and predetermined brace heights mirror my own. My bows too took a leap forward when I began to better wrap my head around the bowmaking why's and what for's and then began using syncronization of the limbs as my compass, which coincidentally also makes bows more user friendly, arrow friendly, predictable, tunable, stable, etc... all the sorts of things bowyers and archers claim to value.
As far as BCWV's bow pictured above. I too wondered why the handle section was so long, and while it looks flat to me as well in the outer limb, without an unbraced profile to compare it to, I'd be hesitant to advocate trying to attain a perfect circular arc. If considerable reflex is glued into the outer limb, in order for the whole limb to do equal work, you'd WANT it a little 'stiffer-looking' there, IMO. In other words, just because it 'looks' stiffer, doesn't mean it's 'acting' stiffer.
Without the unbraced profile as a starting point reference, we can only guess what it should look like at full draw.... for all we know, the outer limbs may already be working more than elsewhere..
Now, I gotta go dig a piece of osage out of my eye