Is your form consistent enough to immediately pick up on a small change in tune? Asked another way, if someone switched your field points and you didn't notice before you shot, how much weight difference on fletched shafts would there have to be before you immediately suspected your tune had changed? 5 grains, 25 grains, 50? I know this question is not totally objective. If you were slightly over or underspined to begin with, the grain change required to be noticed might be minimal if you directionally made it worse as opposed to the other way. In other words, if you're shooting a borderline weak arrow to begin with, I would expect someone would notice a minimal increase in point weight before a decrease, which should arguably produce an marginal improvement in flight. So assume you start with a perfectly tuned arrow. Just curious, as I don't shoot as much when hunting season's over in the dead of winter until the 3D circuit kicks in again. It used to drive me crazy until I figured out that my draw length "grows" up to an inch from "coming out of hibernation" until the next season in early fall. Even though I always loosen up shoulder muscles with elastic bands before every session, I can only assume this is just a function of getting old back muscles loosened up and engaged properly. At least now I understand what happens over time and can compensate proactively with small point weight drops.