Sorry David but the fact remains that the shorter draw length bow has to get to the same draw weight but at a shorter draw length. The power stroke has nothing to do with this because draw length is measured from the back of the bow to the nock of the arrow. The power stroke reflects the energy the bow is storing and that is why the 27" draw length bow with a lower brace height can store as much, or in this case more than the 28" draw bow. A 27" draw is still a 27" draw no matter how you look at it
Here's another way of looking at it.
Let's say you have a bow that pulls 55# @ 27" with a 5.5" brace height and a bow that pulls 55# @ 28" with a 6.5" brace height. Both bows have an increase of 2.5#/inch at the end of their draw. If you raise the brace height of the 27" bow to 6.5" does this mean that it will only pull 52# and if you raise the brace height again to 7.5" then will draw weight goes down to 50# @ 27"? Or take the 28" bow and lower the brace height to 5.5" does that mean it will pull 57.5# @ 28" or lowering the brace to 4.5" mean it will pull 60# @ 28"? No. Lowering the brace height frees up energy tied up in the limbs and raising the brace height ties up energy in the limbs. This is the energy that is used to push the arrow and is reflected in the force draw curve. Changing the brace height merely makes the bow more or less efficient. Lowering the brace height plumps up the force draw curve making more energy available to the arrow and raising the brace height ties up energy in the limbs making the bow less efficient. It does nothing to the peak draw weight at max draw length. The energy is always there it's just a matter of whether it is available to the arrow or not
Take as an extreme example a bow that pulls 55# @ 22". No matter what you do you cannot lower the brace height enough to get the power stroke to equal that of a 28" draw bow so the force draw will reflect that in stored energy. It still has to make that 55# max draw weight inside it's 22" draw so the increase #'s per inch will be much higher than a 28" draw bow. That means the push to the arrow in every inch of travel will be significantly higher than a 28" draw bow but the short power stroke doesn't allow the arrow time to accelerate.
How will this show up on a scale? If you alter the brace height of a bow by lowering it 2" you will get a bump in draw weight at the beginning of the draw then farther up in the draw there will be a less dramatic increase per inch than you would get with the higher brace height, you still get the same overall peak draw weight. That is how you get that increase in efficiency. By moving some of the stored energy down at the beginning of the draw you get more push to the arrow at the end of the stroke. Making a bow more efficient is how you get a higher string tension at brace height. Higher string tension usually means better performance
Anyway if you can't see that then I guess we will just have to agree to disagree