There are so many ways to bugger up these bows its not funny.... even after you have a 100 of them under your belt, and have done everything the same as the last one....something unexplainable happens leaving you scratching your head....
Good example.... i just laid up a bow that i have literally built hundreds of this same design , and the tiller was off by an inch....
Precession lam grinding was done with veneers belly and back, that i ground myself. I used book matched core lams, & I double checked the stack thickness too.... I also double checked the limb lengths from riser to tip notch's, and had my limb profile the same.... I use a pattern for that, and spray paint the outline on the limbs.....
There is absolutely no reason at all these limbs should be so different...... But they are....
Saving grace is that i ALWAYS bring these things in 5-7 #'s over my target draw weight so i have room for adjustment. This one came in about 8-9 pounds over on the rough profile. I always leave the limbs an 1/8" wide all the way through the limb on rough profile. This gives me a bit of room for adjusting alignment , tiller , and draw weight. On long bow limbs you can often adjust these things a lot more than you think by just reducing width and trapping the belly side...... I've got this one within 3# of my target draw weight now
and haven't even sanded glass yet....... I gotta admit... The stiff limb was a bit wider through the fades than the lighter limb, so that helped with my excessive tiller difference quandary. It's manageable now with sanding and trapping.
Bottom line is some of these go smooth as silk, and others fight you every inch of the way, and leave you scratching your head on why..... But that's what makes you a good bowyer. Learning the tricks to balancing things out, and knowing how far you can take it. Sometimes you get da lion.... Sometimes da lion get you... Keep after it bro............ Kirk