toby, if you are shooting a recurve with a straight arm and a deep grip, you may find that with a straight gripped Hill style bow that you will settle into a shorter draw with a bent arm and lose some of your draw length. I have found that lots of guys have a bit of left/right variances when they attempt to have a maximum strecthed out draw with a Hill style bow and then claim that they are better shots with their recurves. If power is an issue, the standard JD Berry, by many opinions is shooting a fairly qucik arrow. If you want to maintain a straighter arm the JD Berry Taipan would also be a worthy consideration. About Hill bows shooting a faster heavy arrow and an r/d shooting a faster lighter arrow. I have never ever seen that. My expeience over the past 50 years of bow hunting mostly with Hill style bows, a few really nice recurves and lately r/d bows, shows that while a Hill style bow with heavy limbs does not have as much variation with arrow weight changes, they never actually pass up a fast bow when the arrow weight goes up to reasonable weights. I am not about to fletch up a steel fence post to see if that changes, however. It is more likely that if you come across a Hill style bow and a recurve and an r/d bow that shoot a super heavy arrow about the same speed, you may very likely find that the other bows will shoot a lighter arrow faster than the Hill style bow. The catch 22 with longbows and wood arrows is that when weight goes way up the spine goes up with it, Hill style bows really like wood arrows and Hill style bows quite often prefer a softer spined arrow than a recurve. What is left to decide is simply what bow you like and what bow you can shoot the most accurately. I don't really think you have to worry about power. I know of a fellow with a 51 pound Schulz with a 26" draw that shot 5 elk and got either pass throughs or complete penetration on all 5 with standard cedar arrows. Any good standard longbow, as the ones mentioned above, with a 28" or over draw will have more power at 47 pounds than even a fast 51 pound Schulz at 26 inches.