Anyway, to continue with the tuning project, the photo above is of 3 5575 shafts. As Gold Tip is wont to do, they all are of slightly different spines. The top one measures 92 on my spine tester, while the bottom two measure 82 and 80. I doubt if those are the actual spines, but at least it gives me a basis for comparison. It seems that the higher the spine, the more horizontal the shaft. In fact, the stiffest spined one on top actually shows a slight nock low orientation, which resulted in the high impact. If only they were spined correctly, that would be the end of my quest, but of course they all show somewhat stiff.
The best spine for the bow is 3555, but I have been unable to get rid of the nock high. I reduce the nock point until I get the nock high orientation shown in the first photo I posted, and then further lowering of the nock point does not have any effect on the nock high.
I was surprised that an over-spined bare shaft, 5575, will shoot flat, or even nock low, but a correctly spined bare shaft will not shoot flat.
In answer to some earlier questions, all the nocks are for the same GT shafts, but I did switch a few back and forth to see if I noticed any difference, which I didn't. I shoot 3 fingers under, and a 5/8-3/4 nock height seems to be fairly normal for 3 under. I use two tied-on nocks: one above and one below the arrow nock. In any event, as I mentioned, reducing the nock height does not reduce the nock high, at least with 3555's. I have an old spine tester which uses a weight and a deflection indicator, which will at least give me relative differences.
The 5575's are not that bad. I probably just have to fool around with the length and point weight some until I find some combination that has acceptable up/down and sideways bare shaft deflection. Either that or try some other brand of shaft.