You got it Frank.Let the bow and the arrows tell you what they like.I am still pretty sure that you will have plenty of arrow weight.And don't panic if the arrows end up heavier than you anticipated.More weight will just give you more penetration.If you don't like the trajectory,than you can go to a different shaft to change your overall weight.
Doing some chronograph work with bows that weight,I had to drop arrow weight almost 100 grs to gain 10 fps.It was the same on several bows.It boiled down to :a 6% gain in speed,lost me 15% penetration.100 grs of arrow weight sounds like a lot but the velocity difference isn't nearly what I imagined.dropping arrow weight 95 grs only took me from 155 fps to 165 fps.I tested this over and over.95 grs of arrow weight is almost 2 GPP.I don't even have to think about trajectory difference out to 20 yds.,which is were I like to keep my hunting shots.At 25 yds,there is a slight difference,but not as much as I thought.
Take your time with the tuning and remember,always change one thing at a time.Tune on still days,as a breeze can give you false readings.Don't get in a hurry,just enjoy the time shooting.If it were me,I think I would set one batch of arrows aside until I got one set thoroughly tuned.That will make it simpler and less confusing.Once one is tuned,thst will somewhat point you in the right direction for the other.The 5575's are stiffer,so they will need more point weight and vice versa.Good luck with it.