The Black Hunter longbow uses the same riser as the Black Hunter recurve, and is cut past center (unless they have come up with a one-piece longbow that I don't know about).
For future reference, to determine the center cut of a bow, prop it against something handy, like the tail gate of a pickup truck, where you can stand behind it. Close one eye and move back and forth until the string bisects the centerline of the bow. If there is no convenient mark on the centerline, you can put a piece of masking tape on the limb and measure where the centerline is with a ruler and put a mark there on the tape. With the string bisecting the centerline of the bow, notice where it appears to be with respect to the strike plate. If it is outside the strike plate, the bow is cut past center; if it is inside the strike plate, the bow is not cut past center.
To take it one step further, put an arrow on the string and then stand in the same position as before. With the string centered on your mark, the tip of the arrow should lie just outside the centerline of the bow. Since the strike plate is not adjustable on most of the bows we shoot, there is only one thing you can do, and that is to put a thicker strike plate on the bow if the tip of the arrow is not outside of center. Since that hardly ever happens, this is really just something to check since your bow is already in the right position to do it, unless you have a metal riser bow bow that is cut way past center, which the Black Hunter is not.