Well, I received the Wesley in the mail yesterday (thanks again, Jim). She's a real beauty...like-new condition, 5 lams of bamboo under clear glass back and belly, antler limb tips, Cocobola riser, dished grip, kind of a taupe (light brown) leather grip and rest/sideplate, matte finish. It came with a 10 strand 450+ string on it, plus extra strings and a neat little stringkeeper. Very nice package.
First impression after tweaking the nock point and running through a 20 minute shooting session was that this bow is much faster than I thought it would be and it took surprisingly little time to hit consistently with it. Even with some rather low-quality 55-60# cedar practice arrows (sound, but not the straightest or straight-grainiest) the bow shot accurately and consistently at the 12 to 20 yard distances I shot. At 57# its a bit heavier than what I normally like, but after a few shots the weight didn't seem bad at all. One of the advantages of the longer longbows.
I draw 28", use a Hill-style grip, a deep-hook string hold and cant the bow moderately. the arrows showed a slightly stiff spine (arrows slightly left; I'm RH), which surprised me since I thought 60-65# would be a better fit for that poundage, not 50-55#. I might play with the point weight and/or arrow length a little...can always increase shaft length by an inch if needed.
The 450+ string was a bit small for the arrow nocks...a little piece of masking tape wrapped temporarily around the serving fixed that...and had only 6 or 8 strands of catwhisker silencers on it. It was still very quiet.
The low-stretch 450+ string clearly adds performance compared to what B-50 dacron would provide (which I have on my Abbot longbow), but I still wonder about the stress on those limbtips. Shoots nice and quick, though, even with 560-570 grain arrows. Got my GN quiver and a set of fur silencers on now, the latter just for a little extra dressy. Mighty purty.
I'll make a 16 strand B-50 soon and try it. Want to see what string tickles my fancy, plus need to decide if the quiver will stay on or be replaced by my back quiver instead.
Neat bow, lots of fun to shoot, totally classy look. Thanks to all for your advice and tips.