I asked a very experienced archer this type of question and he replied that it will have a detrimental effect on the arrow.
Getting back to this particular part.
It's an extremely common thing in human nature to trust people who are very experienced. There is an assumption that they have a clue what they're on about.
I personally know many archers who have attended the Olympics. One of them openly admits that she has no idea about tuning her bow.
Another one who has medalled at the Olympics randomly installed a piece of equipment onto his bow as an idle experiment and then couldn't figure out why he was shooting all over the place until myself and another archer, who was an Olympic Bronze medallist, asked him WTF he had that on his bow for. He went on to become a world champion eight years later. Great bloke. Still does odd stuff.
I've seen Olympic Gold medallist archers write on international forums that their new win and win limbs keep the string going in a flat plane after release.
When you see someone lie blatantly to the entire world, it is your duty to the human race to call them out. You can either contribute towards knowledge or endorse global stupidity.
The ability to put an arrow where you want it can be totally isolated from the requirement to know anything other than the process required to achieve it.
How many of you people reading this felt yourself get smarter as your scores increased?
Did you gain an appreciation of composite materials, stability and aerodynamics last time you hit a PB?
Do 1400 plus Fita shooters all automatically get engineering degrees?
There is a guy in my club who is very experienced. He's been shooting the way he's been shooting for more than 20 years.
I know this, because he tells everyone who makes any suggestion at all to how he could improve.
It never ceases to amaze me that he shoots next to an archer who started attending world cups within three years of taking up the sport and has been now doing so for two years.
Would I ask either of them for archery advice? Both of them look like experienced archers to the beginners.
I would ask the one who has shot for 20 years nothing, because their method isn't working.
I'd ask the other what they did to get good enough to qualify for World Cups in such a short time. I already know that though.
They spend a lot of time shooting.
Until I threw my bow, press and new strings at them earlier this year and said "Figure out how to put them on." they would never have the confidence to do it themselves.
We have very similar bows, so it is totally worth having them experiment and learn on mine so that they have the confidence to fix their own overseas if they need to.
Beware of who you choose to believe. I know excellent archers who are conspiracy theorists.