Thanks for the input guys!
For the nocking point, I think it will be, as Pat and Pappy suggested, a matter of experimentation as I go. I just wondered as many of the modern fiberglass bow shooters I've seen nock rather high, and most of them are using carbon or aluminum arrows. After trying it out with my brother's arrow (700 grains) it seemed to make a big difference- in that I actually hit the target
. Since spine affects the left/right, and weight affected up/down, I wodnered that just adjusting the arrow so the rear end was slightly higher than a heavier arrow would "compensate" or something.
As for weight, I was worrying about going under the 10 grains per pound rule of thumb- which I've come to belive was an almost requisite for traditional bows. I enjoy shooting out to 55 yards at times on targets also, but my heavier arrows land in the dirt half the time, so I was interested in trying lighter shafting (which also has the benefiet of being less work
) for arrows. Pope and Young and Howard Hill shot lighter arrows in the 600-700 grain range which confused my further, and led to my asking here.