On my screen it's hard to see a pic that small, and I don't feel qualified to comment on other people's tillers here -- I struggle enough with my own! But I would like to help at least by making that photo larger -- and in doing so I noticed one other thing -- and that has caused me big problems in tillering my own bow recently, too.
The problem is that many digital cameras, phones, etc. distort the image quite a bit. And unfortunately, they can do that unevenly left to right across a photo.
Here is Gutshot's photo enlarged to 600 pixels wide. That's a help. But also notice that the building studs behind the tillering board are nearly plumb on the left edge of the photo, and strongly angled to the right on the right side of the photo. I bet that in real life, those studs don't fan out like that.

If this effect is a result of lens distortion instead of crazy studs, then the bow will appear to dip more on the right limb than it would otherwise.
Here's a modified photo that i put through a photo editing program and used the perspective tool to even up the studs and the top and bottom edgess of the tillering board. I'm not saying this is representative either, but it gives you an idea of what the difference in lens distortions can amount to with respect to limb bending:

Not trying to throw a monkey wrench into anything here, but I trust my own photos of my bow's tillers a lot less than I did once I saw what it did to the shape of the vertical siding behind my tiller tree. Same effect -- and I checked the siding with a level to make sure it was plumb -- it was.