Thanks for the responses guys!
OK...here are some more specifics on my situation:
The juniper bow's tips are a little less that 1/2" wide with wrapped "shoulders" for the nocks...so the tips are pretty light. The hand shock is mostly vibration shock. If I grip the bow loosely, the shock goes away but I loose some accuracy. The widest part of the limbs is 1 1/8" and the last 8" are tapered toward the tips. The sting is sinew, so a heavier string will probably work better. I will try using a heavier linen string. This should also reduce the "stretch effect" at the end of the release (vibration). I will also start using arrows that are 10 grains in weight for every # of draw.
The HHB bow is a mystery: I'm still trying to figure out why it has no hand shock. The limbs are narrow (1") and taper from the grip to the tips. It has a natural gull wing shape and it was easy to tiller. It has a sinew string. It weighs about an ounce more than the juniper (9.5 oz) and is braced @ 5" (1" less than the juniper). It shoots a 300 grain arrow @ 105 fps (the juniper shoots same arrow @ 109 fps). Since it stores about the same amount of energy...I would think that the hand shock would be about the same as the juniper. I also think that the arrows should fly with the same trajectory from both bows? (Nope-Nope)
I'm aslo trying to figure out why the arrows seem to loose energy in flight when fired from the HHB bow....although I think they might be "fishtailing" slightly as they leave the bow?.....it's hard to tell. I'm going to try arrows with different lengths and types of tapering to see which type works best. Right now, I'm using 26" barrelled shafts with the center of mass (balancing point) in the middle. This arrow style works well on all my other bows but maybe the HHB is a bit quirky. Maybe I'll shave it down so that it pulls 45# @ 22" instead of 20"....and see if that changes anything.
I'll keep you posted.