I've had my own bows since I was 4 and from 14 - 54 shot 45#, one hunting bow and one target bow, and even dabbled a bit with wheelie bows. When I got back into trad full-time I focused on learning about different designs, bowyers, makers, design theories, materials ,etc., and trying a lot of different bows. Now I own too many bows and shoot bows 26-60# interchangeably. It is really cool to shoot a 26# 1961 Howatt with tiny arrows from 50 yards and watch those little darts arc through space then hit the target with hardly a sound. It is also cool to shoot a properly-silenced 60# hunting bow with big heavy arrows, where the bow makes hardly a sound but the arrows hit the bag target like Jeff Torborg catching Sandy Koufax in the last two innings of The Perfect Game...six Chicago Cubs knew that Lefty was going to throw nothing but fastballs, nothing but strikes, yet none made contact, every pitch hitting the catchers glove like a old time wooden sledge. Since I practice with some many different combinations, I can hunt with many combinations, depending on what I'm hunting and how I'm hunting. The super recurves make a lot of speed for their draw weight, but I cant get them hunting-quiet.