The really cool thing about wood arrows is that you can cut them down until the target point is completely on the bow and they will fly great. With my Hill style bows if I have a situation where I bury a single bevel custom Hill broadhead into a tree branch, and then I go nuts and kick the arrow to break it off, I can glue a blunt on that shaft, draw it completely onto the shelf and it will still shoot. I have seen this often with net length cedars, technically that shaft should be way over spine, but it flies perfect. There has to be some kind of mechanical math why it works. Same holds true for minimum length broadheads and wood arrows. The more arrow that is out in front of the bow the more difficult it is to predict the spine calculations. With some bows and broadhead combinations, it can put the blade just off the finger enough so that it can ride up and cut. With a Hill style grip or anything that has the arrow touching or nearly touching the finger this is less of a threat with a two blade head. One way to train yourself to have a consistant draw, is to draw with both eyes closed until you touch. Then draw with just your aiming eye closed, until you touch. Then with the aiming eye open and the other closed, then finally with both eyes open. When you can go through these stages without any hickups, nice and smooth, you can try a nice smooth full draw shot with your broadhead. If you let go before you touched, start from the beginning. You do not want to jerk to get it to the finger, nice and smooth all the way. This fixes the flinch and regulates your draw length with no wasted consentration. A coach of a target shooter gave me this tip about the practice draws and it worked for me and others that I have helped with TP. I also know how it erks the clicker people, but the mind set of those that shoot with a Hill style bow and Hill style form is different than those that shoot with straight draw static styles. One of the major pitfalls of the Hill shooting style is that it becomes very fluid and one can develop a short draw release, cutting arrows to that minimum needed length is one of the best tools for controlling your draw and you can be rewarded with really good arrow flight in the process.