I thought I'd post this up here as I know there are probably more Hill-style afficionados concentrated on this site than anywhere else. With that said...
I've been dealing with some tendinitis in my bow arm elbow. It's not related to Hill bows, more like overuse from work but it's bled over into some solid discomfort with my shooting. As a result I dropped down to shooting a bow that is 40 pounds at my draw (a sweet vintage Root recurve). Now, over the last few weeks, the tendinitis is starting to become more manageable and I can shoot my heavier bows with more frequency.
So tonight I pulled my Whippenstick Classic off the rack because I really, really want to hunt with the bow. I haven't done a lot of broadhead tuning with it because of the tendinitis over the last few months. I shoot an 8 strand high performance string on the bow. I was getting pretty good results with my .600 spine carbons at 30" and 200 gr. tips but not perfect. I have a bunch of strings floating around so I started trying different ones to see if I could get a better tune. I accidentally put the string for the vintage Root recurve on the Classic and I'm a bit stumped by the results.
The string off the Root is 12 strands of B-50 dacron. The first shot came off the bow extremely weak. I tested for an overly stiff arrow causing a weak reaction and that wasn't the issue. In the end I dropped the tip weight down 75 grs., the arrows are flying fantastic, the bow is quieter (already very quiet) and, the real kicker, it's shooting softer in the hand. The bow has very little thump compared to most Hill style bows (really comparable to most R/D longbows) but I was mystified as to why the dacron string seemed to reduce the amount of felt vibration with a significantly lighter arrow.
I'm curious to hear if anyone else has had a reaction like that. In my experience it's pretty much always been the opposite. The FF type strings are faster, quieter and reduce handshock.
Either way, I'm really pleased with the results and looking forward to making meat with the bow now.