Well, thats a graceful reply to a potentially provocative post - so hats off! Actually, If I was shooting a 60-65g arrow and trying to get 220yds, I wouldn't need to shoot at 45 degree with either of the 100lb or so hardwood laminate bows of which I have significant experience. With those, I would expect 240yd or so. I don't know if you were at the Finsbury shoot at Sandon recently, but if you were, you would have seen me shooting 220yds yd with a 110lb swiss yew bow with 86g arrows, but that was at 45 degrees.
The discussion seems to have suddenly moved to needing to shoot 220 yds relatively flat. Well pardon me, but I've always had the view that engagements opened with a volley at about 45degrees and gven the relative standardisation of the MR arrow, this would appear to be with a 60-65g arrow for longest range, and if the distance at the marks was 220yd, then one would guess that this, or somewhere thereabouts, is what was done with those arrows. I can see the point which you are making of accurate shooting by shooting straighter - but it isn't a given. I certainly shoot more accurately that way, but the people who win at clout competitions generally do so with an aim at or about 45 degrees using lighter bows, so it isn't by definition inaccurate to do it that way. Much has been made of the skill of archers of old and this has been used to infer that they might have been able to use much higher draw weights than we are accustomed to. I have always preferred to argue that this would have made them better archers (at a variety of draw weights) and this would have stood them in better stead than being able to use, for example, 150lb bows.
C