Huntress,
You must have me mixed up with someone else. I've never used wood for arrows. I'm strictly an aluminum arrow guy. With me shooting low poundages and my 30" draw length, I wanted to shoot 32" BOP arrows. Aluminum was easier to work with than wood or carbon. I never took to wood. With carbon, the correct spine for me with carbon arrows, the carbon shafts only come full length in 30"-31" lengths so I can't make a 32" arrow. Aluminum gave me what I needed.
Using Stu's program shooting my 42# bow, I could shoot 2114s, 2212s, 2213s, 2215s and 2117's. I was lucky since I have 32" test arrows from 2013 all the way up to 2314. All I had to do was use the suggested field point weights, tweak the point weight with 5 grain brass washers behind the field points and adjust the brace height up or down a little.
I found out my bow really likes 2215s and 2117s since they really wallop and deeply penetrate into a bag target with very little trajectory drop between 10-20 yards which is my limit. Without using Stu's program, I would never have even thought about shooting a 2215 or 2117 arrow out of my 42# bow and I finally chose the 2117.
One thing I do to confirm what Stu's program suggests, I paper tune at 5 yards. If I can shoot a bullet hole without any tears, I'm there. One added bonus, Stu's program doesn't give me any aggravation that bare shaft tuning always gave me.