Some thoughts, not a full blown solution.
Unless there is definite proof that the search itself is the bottleneck (don't use your "feeling" to detect bottlenecks, use a code profiler) I would stick with the IntList... If the time spent in the actual search/insert/delete does not amount for at least 20% of the total processor time, don't even bother.
If you still want a hashtable, then ...
Do not convert to a string. The conversion would allocate a new string from the heap, which is much more costly than doing the search itself. Use the int64 modulo some cleverly chosen prime number as the hash key.
Hashtables will give you O(1) only if they are large enough. Otherwise, you will get a large amount of records that share the same hash key. Make it too short, you'll waste your time searching (linearly !) through the linked list. Make it too large, and you waste memory.
Keep in mind that hash tables require some form of linked list to keep all records sharing the same key. This linked list must be implemented either by adding a "next" pointer in the payload objects (which breaks encapsulation - the object does not have to know it is stored in a hash table) or allocating a small helper object. This allocation is likely to be much more costly than the O(log) of the sorted list.
Unless there is definite proof that the search itself is the bottleneck (don't use your "feeling" to detect bottlenecks use a code profiler) I would stick with the IntList...
