Chuck,
I'm not about to blast you. I've shot trad for 15 years and I've never bareshaft or paper tuned. I generally take two or three arrows that experience tells me should be close for a particular setup. I'll start with them on the long side (around 30 inches" even longer if carbon). I draw 28 1/4. I like my arrows a little long anyway, they just seem to tune better and be more forgiving. Next, I put a 145 grain broadhead on simply because this is the weight I like to shoot. I then shoot at ten yards: close enough that if the combo is way off you still hit the target. From here I weed out the obviously to stiff or weak. I can also make nock height adjustments for porpoising. Next I step back to 30 yds. and shoot again. From this distance the broadhead will magnify any problems. Watch the flight of the arrow and check point of impact. If arrow shows stiff, kicks tail right or impacts left,(i'm right handed) I may try a thinner strike plate, lower brace height or weaker spine. If weak, tail left at launch or impacts right, try a shim behind or thicken the strike plate, possibly a lighter head if you prefer, or shorten the shaft a little. For carbon, I will usually have a few heavier weight broadheads up to 250 to try as this is the easiest way to add weight up front.
One thing I rarely hear mentioned today is strike plate adjustment. Most times, you can get an arrow that is close to tune perfectly by adjusting plate thickness.
I may be a dinosaur but this method has always worked for me. I normally shoot broadheads during practice also. I have to laugh when I read about some of the bareshafting marathons that seem all to common these days.
Turpentine