Hi Ken, your suggestion is a good one, and I have made the same suggestion to others many times. I attended Ken Beck’s class on tuning at the BW factory in Nixa, MO, about 15 years ago, and he helped me tune my first arrow, a 2117, on a brand new BW bow I had just taken delivery of at the beginning of the class. The class was primarily a shooting class by Fred Asbell, but I learned just as much from Ken. I have also viewed Ken’s section on tuning on Masters of the Bare Bow 2, and his subsequent videos on YouTube.
I have also used his method to tune as many as a hundred other bows and arrows. The easiest of those to tune probably took me about 5 minutes, and the hardest is probably the one I am currently working on. I knew early on that this bow would work well with a GT 3555, cut to my preferred length of 29”, with a 145 grain tip, giving me just over 9 gpp, which is the weight I prefer for hunting. The only problem was that I could never get it below 10-15 degrees nock high, no matter where I put the nock point. For months I just gave up on it, assuming, as you suggested, that it was just some inherent characteristic of the bow. But it continued to bug me, and as I would think of different things, I would try them.
Imagine my surprise when I shot a 3555 bare shaft one day and it flew fine, with no nock high! Evidently this bare shaft is one that I hadn’t tried before, that is significantly over spined for a 3555. Since I couldn’t find any other 3555’s like that, I started experimenting with 5575’s, which also shot flat, or even nock low in one case, but of course were too stiff. I had no idea that a change in spine would affect nock high, and I don’t recall Ken mentioning this either.
The reason I have posted this confusing array of bare shafts is to find out if anyone can make better sense out of it than I can.