no arrow weight is considered in the mix. First, make sure you are testing the spine of the wood shafts with the grain going perpendicular to the bar that presses the shaft. This is its strongest side as having the grain parallel to floor will be weaker.
Do this every time... I will measure....rotate shaft 180* to the opposite side but still with grain vertical and do again for consistency. If I am looking for a range I will then measure the flat grain sides as well. Not perfect but works for me.
I dont worry about how arrow length and points affect them...that is not the point.
The device ONLY measures STATIC SPINE...deflection of wood shaft itself with no other inputs. The 26" spread makes no difference as most important that they are all measured with same distance and process.
Before you buy your shafts or start weighing and sorting you should have identified your point weight, draw length and therefore arrow length. Most add 5# for every weight increase over 125gr for points...and 5# for every inch over 28". Some other considerations like how clean your release is....if shooting no stretch string...design of bow (center shot vs non-center shot) like recurve vs selfbow.
taking the static spine you measured on your spine tester and then doing the calculations for your point weight, draw length, FastFlight String, Center Shot or Not, etc....and it gets you in the ball park for your arrows.
You can further fine tune by changing point weights...or brace height. I prefer brace height.
Good luck. I am sure I confused you more.