Friend,
I have been using the 150 grain Grizzly Bruin double bevels on my cedar shafts and have done very well. Easy to get shaving sharp, fly well, generally penetration up to the fletch or better on whitetails.
I am skeptical about the single bevel hype. I'm a professional engineer. I've also been gunsmithing for 30 years so I have had to learn how to sharpen tools. I have learned the hard way that the part of an edge that controls the cutting it the angle between the micro-bevels of the edge - single bevel tools yield the same edge angle between the micro-bevels, are harder to sharpen and don't do a better job at cutting wood, antler, bone or steel. A burred edge rolls over and stops cutting.
The purported helical wound channel only increases the probability of cutting major blood vessels if the major blood vessels run parallel to each other - they don't!
A single bevel can only impart a "bone splitting force" if the arrow has sufficient rotational inertia to impart such a force (see Newton's Laws of motion) - it doesn't.
Use what works best for you.
Best Regards,
JMC