I don't pay much attention to the Personal From Factor number until I'm through tuning both of my bows. Let me clarify.
I'm right handed and shoot right handed bows with a split finger one over, two under tab. With my 30" draw length, I shoot 32" BOP aluminum arrows. Never shorter, never longer. This is one reason why I don't bare shaft tune. I choose the point weights I want to shoot whether they are 75 grains, 80 grains, 85 grains, 90 grains, 100 grains, 125 grains, etc. This is another reason why I don't bare shaft tune. Stu's calculator does all the bare shaft work for me in one quarter of the time.
I then practice at 5, 10, 15 and 20 yards. If the arrow is hitting slightly to the left (stiff) or right (weak) of where I'm aiming at with field points, I raise or lower the brace height accordingly so the arrow hits where I'm aiming or looking at. When the field points are hitting where I'm aiming at, at these distances, then I remove the field points and shoot the same grain broadhead weight at the same yardages. The vast majority of the time, the broadheads are hitting in the same place as the field points.
Only then do I look at and deal with the Personal Form Factor. This is what I've found with both of my bows.
For my 42# recurve shooting a 2212 arrow with an overall arrow weight of 421 grains, with a 75 grain point weight, my Personal Form Factor is (0). I didn't have to adjust the PFF default number which is (0).
But; for my 37# recurve shooting the same 2212 arrow with the same overall arrow weight of 421 grains, with the same 75 grain point weight, I had to adjust the PFF default number from (0) and my Personal Form Factor number with this bow is (+9).