I assume you're shooting a Hill style longbow, cut 1/8-inch from center with a dacron string. If so, you're drawing about 78# or more at 29 1/2 inches. You'll need at least 85# spine to get good arrow flight if you leave the shafts full length and use 160- grain points. You might get away with 85# if you shorten them one inch and reduce the point weight to 125 grains.
Adding shaft weight has the same (though reduced) effect as adding point weight. Neither changes the static spine, but both change the dynamic spine of the arrow. However, adding 25 more grains to the point has a greater effect than adding 25 more grains to the arrow shaft, which is distributed along the entire length of the shaft. Regardless, adding physical weight to the arrow requires more static spine, how much more depends on how much more physical weight is added and where it's added.
In addition, hardwoods are physically heavy and don't recover from flexing around the riser as fast as softwoods like cedar, spruce and fir, and thus require an even heavier spine. With your current set up (arrow length, point-weight, wood choice), 90-95# spine will likely work better, particularly with broadheads.
If my assumptions are incorrect and you're shooting a hybrid, cut to center or past center and a fast flite string, you'll need a lot more spine, probably another 20# or so to 100-105#. That's pretty hard to come by in wood,but possible.
Adjusting the brace is done to find the sweet spot and perhaps final tune the bow to the arrows. It will only change the draw weight, and thus arrow spine required, by a pound or two. Good luck. :eek: