This is coming from a guy that bought a flag ship bow at full price from a dealership, wasn't happy with how they set it up and learned myself (mistakes included) on a brand new bow and 2 sets of strings, and a cam later...
Get a bow with a dual yoke cable system (the cables split in a Y at each end of the bow where they connect to the cams). This gives you the absolute amount of adjust-ability and you can tune till your hearts content. This will also make the other bows seem easier (no bow set up is easy if you're OCD). My personal choice to learn is the Bowtech Experience, you get the dual yoke, over parallel limbs which are more difficult to press, and a good customer support base (not the best but gets you through).
Many bows have this yoke system so have your pick. Be wary though, some Mathews have a 5 string set up and that's going to cost you in string cost. The regular buss cable set ups in most elites are simple and durable, which is why i own and shoot one for hunting with that system. But for target (indoor and outdoor) and back up hunting, I get the most tuning I can.
Get a bow with a dual yoke cable system (the cables split in a Y at each end of the bow where they connect to the cams). This gives you the absolute amount of adjust-ability and you can tune till your hearts content. This will also make the other bows seem easier (no bow set up is easy if you're OCD). My personal choice to learn is the Bowtech Experience, you get the dual yoke, over parallel limbs which are more difficult to press, and a good customer support base (not the best but gets you through).
Many bows have this yoke system so have your pick. Be wary though, some Mathews have a 5 string set up and that's going to cost you in string cost. The regular buss cable set ups in most elites are simple and durable, which is why i own and shoot one for hunting with that system. But for target (indoor and outdoor) and back up hunting, I get the most tuning I can.