I'd say to wait for OL's 'definative' reply. He understands more about tuning than I ever will.
However, if you're looking to tune the dynamic spine for an Extreme FOC arrow, I'd say to start with the point weight you want and tune by progressively shortening the shaft in small increments. Look only at your 'right-left' impact and ignore the nock's position (other than for any 'up-down' adjustments of the nocking point). Even if you normally shoot with a canted bow, this spine-tuning seems to work best when done with the bow held vertically.
If you shorten the shaft all you can and still show a weak dynamic spine, then you'll need to start all over, with a stiffer static spined shaft and the same total point weight.
Once dynamic spine is correct, fletch up some shafts and compare the point of impact with the bare shafts. I finish by comparing the grouping of fletched broadheads against the bare shafts. To date, once I had the bare shafts flying right, the fletched shafts have all shot to the same impact.
It all sound a bit harder than it really is. I've done enough of them now that it's a pretty fast and simple processs to find the correct dynamic spine for the Extreme FOC's. After I got through the initial learning curve, it's been as easy as falling off a log.
Ed
TGMM Family of the Bow