RE: adjusting my new bow?
Read my first post. There are a lot of things to learn before needing to worry about broadheads. Nobody here or on any other board can tell which is the best broadhead, or the best anything. They can only tell you what they've used and foound to be the best that they've tried. And nobody has tried them all so anybody's opinion is based on limited experience.
You can pick any broadhead you like and get it to fly well once you know how to tune your equipment. The old cliche of "You have to learn how to crawl before you walk" holds very true in archery. Once you gain consistency in your shooting form and learn how to adjust your equipment broadhead tuning should be a lot easier.
Try to put this into persepective. If you would do a lot of shooting you might fling 5000 arrows out of the bow in a year. If you can shoot and tune you might have your bow tuned close enough that no adjustments are necessary to shoot broadheads when that time comes. If this happens (like me) then shoot about 20 shots a year for practice with broadheads and maybe a couple shots on game. Give it rthe benefit of a doubt and say 50 shots. So what are on the end of you arrows for the rest of your shots during the year.
I know some guys shoot broadheads a lot, but if you get involved with 3D or any target type venue then you aren't allowed to shoot broadheads. And really, what's the purpose. They make field (practice) points for a reason. Field points cost about $3 a dozen. Broadheads cost from $4 to $12 each.