well,, hmmm
if the brace height is too low,,,, the arrow gonna ack like its too stiff,,
or clang on the bow,,
as you raise the brace, there is a sweet spot that the bow likes,, cause the way it is tillered and some other stuff I cant explain:),,,
now,, if you brace the bow to high,, it might shoot ok, but you really straining the limbs too much,, and it probably gonna take too much set or break,,
so better to err on the side of as low as you can go and get good arrow flight and quite release,,
if your release is bad,, wont matter where the brace height is,, it probably gonna make noise when you shoot,,
I have shot with people and they say ,, my bow is noisey,, then I shoot it,, hmmm it was quite,, so not the bow,,
its probably release and hold on the bow,,
theres all kinda vibration going on,, of course,, but bottom line,, the bow gonna shoot nice at a reasonable brace height as suggested above,,
I have shot some bows where the arrow pass was so wide,, it was very difficult to tune it,, and alot of things needed to be adjusted,,string alignment etc,, to get the bow to shoot well,, not just the brace,,, ok that being said,,
if the bow is lined up good,, it will be forgiving on the brace,say maybe shoot good from 5 to 6 1/2 inches,,
things are not so critical on a long bow, and thats why they have the reputation for being so accurate,, you can be off on the tiller and brace,, and it still shoot good,,
ok not on a short bow,, you have to have every thing pretty close to get one to shoot really well,,
and thats why alot of folks think they are not accurate,, but they are if tuned well to hit that sweet note Pearl was taliking about,, just like an anglels voice from heaven when you shoot that arrow,,,,