ORIGINAL: WV Hunter
ORIGINAL: TFOX
Well,at 29" draw length and shooting a .400 spine arrow at 70#'s,I am going to say the broadhead hitting right is due to the arrow spine being too weak.As far as too high,I would say the rest needs to be moved down slightly as well.
I would try to tune by moving the rest towards your field points but I doubt you will have much succes with that arrow spine.
This is the first thing tat comes to mind as well. The whole point of tuning is to get the arrow/bow combination working to it's optimum. You already have the arrows. Dropping a turn or two off the limbs can be part of the tuning process and is a lot cheaper than another batch of arrows. Actually limb bolts are put on a bow for a lot more than just holding the limbs on the riser. You'd probably get those arrows to fly at 65# and no animal on this planet will know the difference.
As for the arrows hitting high? You bet. Move the rest down or nocking point up. Shooting through paper shows you how the arrow is leaving the bow. Thgere are more factors than this that determine how it hits down range. Rear drag and FOC enter into it as well, and these do not show at a couple feet through paper. 20 yards is a lot longer than a couple feet so any imperfections will be readily seen, especially when you put blades up front.
TFOX is right. Try to lower your poundage down to 60 and see how it flies before you attempt adjust anything, youneed 340's imo