Even if that's the intended draw length. Most warbow makers don't do it, unless they're photographing it for a customer or something. If a bow is meant to be 120# at 32", you take it up to 28", work out the projected draw weight at 32" and leave it at 28" on the tiller. If it makes it to 28" and the tiller is spot on, it'll make it to 32".
I pull my 32" draw bows, whether they are 50 lbs or 130 lbs, usually to 33" on the tiller. I guess I am more merciless than others. (Thats about as heavy as I make though, if I was making heavier, I don't know if I would) If they fail than I will make another. I sent someone a bow one time that was suppose to be 100lbs, but I miscalculated how the weight would stack ( I measured at 28", but made the bow like an inch longer than I usually do), and it only measured 93#, which he wasn't happy about at all, as the first thing he did is measure the draw weight.
On top of my lack of faith in myself to calculate draw weight, I think a bow can loose 5 lbs sometimes just from being pulled those extra 4 inches, so I always make sure to pull and measure at 32", after working the bow in significantly. I wouldn't trust myself and my puny draw to shoot in a bow properly at 32" either.
EDIT: And I got a pulley setup with a block and tackle that I pull by hand, so it is not static or locked or anything. I hate those ones that you crank with a winch, where the bow is stuck, they scare me! If I ever make bows that pull 750 lbs at 38 inches, I think I will just triple up or so on my block and tackles,
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