I personally am in full agreeance with Gillingham's video, from my own personal experiences.
My very last set of arrows I put together (a set for 3d), I went the whole 9 yards on them. Weighed out all components and matched them to arrows weight wise, cut each arrow from both ends to get them to my target length, squared the ends, glued in inserts carefully, spun them all afterwards to check for wobbles from a crooked insert, shot them through paper at 8' as bareshafts and spun nocks to get them all the same, clocked them, and then fletched them accordingly (2° of left offset). The whole dozen came out within 1.2 grains of each other.
After they were fletched. I went and shot them all through paper at 5' and found 5 of them were making different tears than the rest. At 20 yards they also would hit a bit out of the group from the others, can really tell if you shoot each one a few times at a new Vegas 3 spot target. A pattern emerges pretty quickly doing that.
I was able to get them corrected to what the others were doing, but it meant that I have to shoot them with the indicator vane oriented differently than the others or strip them and refletch. Frustrating after spending the time to bareshaft nock tune all of them through paper.
From here on out I will not bother shooting them as bareshafts. I will just fletch them up with all the same color vanes and then nock/group tune them afterwards. I'm pretty used to orienting arrows off the raised portion on one side of most brands of nocks, so I don't think not having an off color vane will really bother me.