Let us know how the testing goes, because it has been a while since we have had a good arrow weight discussion. Tradgang is talking about deer "jumping the string", and total arrow weight and such, and Stickbow is going on about arrow requirements for elk, so PA can keep it going. What makes our discussion different might be our arrow speeds? Lots of archers with more harvest experience on here than me.
Seems a few extra feet per second or a couple dozen grains of arrow weight can change the momentum and KE of the situation, that is known.
If I hunted Howell Island, Missouri exclusively, I might go heavier, in that primal bottomland forest. I had a deer at 7 or so feet and could not get a shot!
I thought about the hickory shafts from Pinehollow Longbows, and have hunted with ash shafts and a low 40's bow. Last deer harvest, I saw some issues with a heavy mule fat arrow, >525 grains and a primitive bow that was not "efficient," (slow speed allowed some deer movement, but the 'spear' did its job). However, the heavier shafts are quiet, and structurally sound, like the good Doc Ashby likes.
The debate continues...