OK, here's my best effort, and I'm by far an advanced arrowsmith. I hardly even tune my arrows, I mark them different and shoot them different. Takes a lot of shooting, i.e. string music played daily.
Anyway, here we go. Do you have points on them? You need to. Right now your arrows are over spined, nock right of point on impact. It's good that they are long and heavy. Move back about 5 more yards, 10 paces or so total. Shoot again from there to make sure the same thing is happening. Nock to the right, like you said. I think your arrows are heavy, so I'd sand em down til they were a little closer to the same weight. Unless you have a really long draw, you could cut them down an inch, but I wouldn't worry about it yet. By sanding them you have lowered their spine. Shoot them again from about 10 steps back. What you are looking for w/ bare tuning a long shaft is for the nock to be facing left of the arrow point, this is under spined. (This is for a right hand shooter.) NOW, start cutting the arrow length down a 1/4 to 3/8" @ a time and re applying points and shooting again and repeating until the shaft shoots relativly striaght fron 10 paces. This is the proper arrow length. Fletch em up and you got some shooters. Use the same weight point you plan on shooting while doing this. I like to shoot blunts, they tear up a target, but are much more verstile for my shooting. Sheew that was long, hope it helps. Some of you arrowsmiths chime in, dpg