If you test both of those limbs, I think you will find better performance and a better string angle at full draw with the longer wedges because it pushes the working portion out further. You just need to get rid of the flat spot.
I lay all my TD limbs up with 12” straight taper wedges that are .030 to nothing, and cut the limb butts off about .5” to 1.5” for medium or long limb lengths.
It may be well worth your trouble trying the longer wedges again in a straight taper. IMO.
As far as limb design goes…. That same form will make a great hybrid long bow limb. Go with a deeper stack , .003 forward taper , and narrow up the limbs from 1.25” at the riser to 5/8” at the tips. You will see an incredible jump in performance doing this.
Have you got photos of the form?
For a nice recurve design a bit more hook, using tip wedges to keep them more static is the ticket. But… once you start using an aggressive hook you need to cut that forward taper down to .001 or even a par like crooked stick recommended, or they start going sideways on you. And use stable core under the wedge on the belly side.
The difference between core tough and stable core is night and day. Core tough is .030 thickness and twice the weight. Bingham’s doesn’t sell stable core, so they won’t recommend it.
.02 cents worth. Kirk