I wouldn't worry about brace right now, just fix the tiller, whether its floor tiller, long string, or final brace, or full draw. With your problems you should see differences in limbs with minor bending, or no bending at all. The last 5"inches of the limbs should bend not at all, so that is a given. Hinges are unacceptable so as soon as you see one, pull no further until its fixed, meaning, you have get the hinged limb into a good arc, regardless of how much wood you remove from that limb in the stiffer spots.
When you weaken one limb by removing wood you allow it to bend more. It bends more because the other limb is pulling on it. So that good strong limb is going to relax a little when you weaken the other. Just consider that as you get rid of the hinge--the strong good limb will relax. And so, yes, your brace will effectively change. As you fix your problems you will need to increase your brace because you are weakening the bow with your fixes, but don't worry about brace until you can't see your hinges anymore.
Fix the hinge while watching the other limb. Correct that good strong limb if its too strong, in order to keep your tiller even as you fix the hinge. When you see the two limbs getting close to even, then increase your brace to where you want it. Priority is the hinge, not the brace.