I shoot Easton Axis shifts out of my ACS longbows. I don't know what the inch fractions vs grain weight ratios to dynamic spine might be. I don't use shortening to tune the arrows to the bow. I cut them to the length I want ( 1 inch beyond the riser at full draw) and tune with point/insert and adaptor weight, and sometimes side plate and brace height adjustment.
That being said, I can take two axis shafts, each with the same amount of up front weight, about 275 grains, one an inch shorter than the other, and they both shoot the same to the naked eye. Granted, these are fletched, not bare shaft.
I've also found that I can vary the point weight by at least 50 grains on the same length shafts, all other things being equal, with no noticeable difference in flight. Also with fletched shafts.
They shoot like lasers in both cases. And I'm not a rookie in judging arrow flight. Been at this for nearly 60 years.
What I'm finding, in short, is that these shafts are very adaptable and forgiving with high performance bows cut past center, as long as you have enough spine to begin with, or more precisely, as long as you're overspined quite a bit.