Curvemean,
I can relate. I don't find arrow tuning to be any "fun" at all! It's sometimes just plain frustrating! Like broadhead sharpening...I do it out of respect for the game...but it is often a pure tedious PnA!
I used to be what might be termed a "arra ho" and had every thing imagineable in my quiver... different types (alum, carbon, fiberglass and wood) in different weights, lengths and spine.
When I did my part...they all hit the same relative place...
When I first started BS testing using that planning method...they were ALL weak...way weak!
That's when the light came on. When I was solid footing, standing up in the yard, I was dead on...but not always from a stand or other contorted field position. I was in those "tails" of the standard distribution of bow/arrow tune that OL's site speaks to!
I had dozens of folks stand behind me, on steps, on ladders...etc and they'd "never" see the occasional subtle "kick" I thought I saw.
The planning method showed me "WHY" I saw that kick...I must have had a reasonably "consistent" release to get any decent flight from those mis-matched batch of arrows. That and restricting my shooting to 20 yards! Shooting farther shows so much more...even though I won't take that shot on game..it shows tuning issues better!
So many of my friends, even today, say if they hit where they're looking and fly decent...they're tuned and good!
It's amazing on a simple stick bow, how many li'l things can be tweaked to get that "best" (not just good) arrow flight.
Perception is one thing...duplicatable results can be something else!
I swear by the bare shaft planning method, but it can be a conundrum at times and I have to be shooting well for it to work. I've learned to not just shoot one group, or 5, but on different days before I start messin with stuff.
Seems I'm the most variable variable in my set up!