That's failed logic, Del. As you define it, they may be balanced IF the archer does NOTHING to alter the imbalance with his bow hand, but your balance requisite doesn't take into account the effects..... one of them being the positional relationship of the nock point to the shelf.
We always draw to the same anchor point, but with one limb's relative strength greater than the other, there are consequences... which I explained above, and you partially explained in your last post... i.e. the stronger limb won't flex as much as the weaker one... so the weaker one 'gives' to the stronger, giving away nock position relative to the shelf as it does so.
Again, since we always come to the same anchor, any unbalanced bow, especially your 50/20 bow, can/could be seen as the bow tilting in the hand at full draw, which I've seen on every bowmaking site I've visted. The more the limbs are out of balance, the farther the bow will try to tilt in the hand, and the farther the nock of the arrow will deviate from perpendicular travel relative to the shelf. There are also consequences to THIS, upon release.... arrow porpoising, handshock, inefficiency, unbalanced draw, etc.