BMorv, you got er down my friend. That's how inherently tuned and sweet shooting bows are made... perfectly behaved from the very first arrow, nocked exactly where planned from the beginning. Now that you know what a well designed and well balanced bow feels like, you're more confident in the flight and feel of that first shot, aye?
By the way fellas, I judge the tiller of all of my bows the same way.... self, backed, glass bows, etc.
I think pro bowyers, and most others, tiller their bows 'generically', with an ambiguous positive tiller, not because it's optimal, or right, but first of all, because it's easier for them. Additionally, they're playing it safe, knowing the archer can raise the nock point to 'tune' the bow.(I prefer to call it attempting to mask the imbalance they created). They play it safe with a positive tiller, because if the bottom limb was too weak, relatively speaking, the nock point couldn't be LOWERED below square to achieve good arrow flight since the arrow would come out low and hit the shelf.
So, if they're not willing or able to achieve dynamic balance relative to the archer's fulcrums, it's best for them to set the tiller slightly positive and let the archer try to make it work.