I tiller my bows so that the limbs are under equal strain at full draw, while held the way I hold them. Depending upon a variety of factors, when finished, some bows end up tillered positive, some even, and some negative... like you're describing. When timed/balanced as such, there are no negatives. Things work out for the best all the way around... no tiller shifts, less vibration, handshock, noise, bows are inherently tuned, no need to move hand placement or nock points, etc to find the sweet spot. The sweet spot is right where I put it.
I don't tiller to any predetermined brace height measurements. I balance the bow at full draw and let the braced profile be what it will be. Some folks have a hard time with this... trust issues perhaps. They must have an arbitrary number as their goal from the onset. It's too bad really.
The only "no-no" I can see in your scenario is if you tillered it to be 1/8" negative (greater distance in the bottom limb measurement) and that wasn't what it actually needed to balance limb strain relative to your holds on bow and string... then you could have done a little better, that's all.