You can put a lot of thought into limb timing....But most of it is built into the limbs... There are a lot more things involved than just upper and lower limb strength and tiller measurements. There is the mass weight of the limbs, the exact location of the working portion of the limb, which all needs to be balanced to the pre-load at brace to stop the string clean.
If you get too much mass weight in the outer limbs, and your working portion is shifted too close to your fades, rather than distributed evenly along the limb, it takes a very tight string at brace to stop those limbs dead.
Having the working portion of the limbs off from top to bottom limbs can cause serious vibration issues. (Two limbs bending in slightly different locations.)
often times with lighter weight bows, you can time everything right, and have good pre loads stopping the tips, but have limb bulge issues that cause vibration. The tips stop clean, but the limb bulges forward at mid limb. This will not effect the noise level, but it will effect the performance level.
The location and placement of your fingers on the string, the location of the string nock, and the exact pressure point on the grip being applied can all have effects on residual vibration felt in the riser after the shot..... but from one bow design to the next you'll get different results.
Each and every bow has a bit of personality difference. If you add in different draw weights and different arrow weights into the equation, you get even more differences.
The best thing we can do as archers is be patient and understanding with each bow we set up. Use different types of string, silencers, and arrow weight to adjust your noise level. Find the balance point, or pressure point in the grip where you get the least amount of vibration, and stay as closes as possible to the bowyers recommended brace height.... Typically the noisiest bows out there can be quieted down with heavier shafts, and the right string.... if the bow does't have enough pre load and you get string slap typically found in RC bows... use yarn on the string or a felt pad on the limb tip.....