Look Mom.... I've done my own test since the early 80s, see how yours goes and let us know for sure.
KEY, KEY is that the head must be tight at IMPACT. I do not epoxy all of mine by far as I remove my heads from the arrow for airline travel as I have too much to do once I get to camp that to start touching up heads, something I learned 20 years ago so I need to be able to remove mine if need be.
BUT, I can tell you what will help keep them tight is to go against the norm, or wives tale, is to shoot right wing feathers. Also learned long ago shooting aluminum back in the day. I was told that I need to shoot left wing if I was right handed. There were no judos back then and I shot a lot of field points and I remember those aluminums rattling all the way to the target way to frequently. That 'hollow' hum rattle drove me nuts and I got TIRED of constantly tightening them so, I one day got a dozen right wing....
Case closed.... right wing spins in a direction to KEEP the tips/bheads tight, especially at impact as the rotation into the target is in the tightening direction instead of the loosening direction like left wing feathers. The right wing shot NO different at ALL. I also found out years later by someone that If I shot left wing I could use 'plumber's tape' which never existed when I made the switch. Now I don't need to keep up or deal with such tape because I have 15 dozen right wing arrows at least. However, it might help you if you are shooting left wing....
I say all that to let you all know that if your tip/bhead is NOT tight, there will be leverage applied at impact, and the more its loose at impact the weaker the post will become. The tip/bhead MUST be flush and snug to make the best of the strength of the set up. If there is the tiniest gap - that will be the weakest link.
Hope that helps someone....