correct me if I'm wrong here....
a higher wrist or straight wrist grip something like an asbell grip is going to effectively put that pressure higher up in the bows grip ('lengthening' the bottom limb and bending it less), this should effect how much bend is on that bottom limb, vs the heavy heeled style of shooting Howard Hill shooters enjoy. effectivley shortening the bottom limb and bending it more. It doesnt shorten it literally...in a sense you lopped off 1" of a limb tip. But it definatly I would think have to effect tiller?!?!
Take a kids bow and you can drastically see the difference in what I'm talking about....even with your palm down you can still to a point keep that pressure on the hand at the web of your first finger/thumb.....now put some heel into it and see that bottom limb show much weaker. now heel the bejeezers out of it and see how it reacts. Its much harder to see literally in heavier weight hunting bows, but I would ASSUME the same thing is happening....and I would ASSUME this would drastically change the tiller and timing requirements?!?!?
This is a longbow question, heel down, and how the pressure on your hand is applied to a bow, and how it effects the tiller of said bow...and timing. sorry for the confusion. (sorry for the poor spelling also maybe I should have proofed read first LOL). Not that it cant or doesnt have an effect on a recurve but i would think MOST recurve shooters with a low wrist on the typical pistol grip recurve are not heavy heeling a bow like in a more traditional Hill style of shooting.
so taking a hill bow....lets keep it familiar....put the pressure up near the rest in the throat of an indicator style grip...shoot some arrows.....now heel the bejeezers out of it and see the change (I think MOST of us fall inbetween here as an average). For a guy whose going to heavy heel a bow...what kind of tiller would one want vs a guy with the same bow whose going to have a grip with a much higher pressure point (and I can only think to compare it to how asbell shoots as its easily defined and it definatly puts the pressure point much higher on the grip.
In a nut shell...its doing a similiar thing as going from split finger to 3 under on the string....now you're doing it on the grip by using hand pressure and not literally moving your hand up or down.
How much will it effect tiller....timing, and in what fashion? and what would be the corrective measures for a bower who knows his customer....or one building for him/herself knowing a person has a heavy heel style of shooting vs a more high pressure point?