Boy... my favorite thread and I'm out of town for most of it! :^) I see that someone already gave 3 under the address for out HH web site. There is a great page of careful pix of hand grips.
As to shock, I am currently suffering from terrible disappointment. I have spent the last year and a half buying Howard Hill bows, looking for the famous terrible hand shock, so that I could shoot anyway and be macho about it. Drat it! I have 19 Hills on the wall now and have had six other that I let getaway from me. Weights have run from 27# to 74#. I can't find the hand shock. I was told they were all shocky... well, that ain't so. Then I was told, OK, it's the older ones are shocky... Got two Schulz built and a Kramer... sweet, sweet shooters. Then I got one from a guy who promised me it was the legendary bone breaking, tooth rattling, shocky Hill. Heck, it's so sweet it gave me my best group yet and sits in my lap and purrs while I watch tv! I think these guys are all just mean people who are deliberately leading me on. Every time the subject comes up, 100 guys jump out and tell about hand shock. I want to see it!
Here's my offer... if you have a Hill you think is a terrible shocker, mail it to me. I'll shoot it. If it shocks, I'll send it back with a $100 bill. However, if it shoots sweet and gives me the same size group I get with all of the others, I get to keep it. Now, I know what you're thinking... but I'm an honest man. Many here have dealt with me. If it shocks, I'll say so and actually be glad to finally have experienced what you all are talking about. What could be fairer?
PS... I'd especially like a Hill by Tim Meigs to add to the collection...
Seriously (though that offer is serious...) as someone said, many love them, many hate them. They've been around too long and been loved by too many for the problem to be with the bow. You've got to make up your mind that you want to master this type of bow, and then apply yourself to doing so. It's a different approach to shooting, but it's worth the effort. If you want the easy approach, where you can do all of your compensating with the bow, instead of improving yourself... get a modern bow with all the adjustments.
Dick in Seattle