All shafts 34" long, Bobtailed (straight taper, not torpedo) from 12.7mm (half inch) to 10mm (3/8")
Ash - 67g
Birch - 76g
"Poplar" - 60g
A finished arrow is about 10grams heavier, including head and fletchings. The wood removed when cutting the horn insert is equivalent to the horn being placed. Obviously there's a wide range of different head weights, but if we're talking about Tudor arrows (Livery arrows) then the head is about 8 or 9 grams.
You do get (obviously) a range of weights within the same wood species, but Birch is considered quite a bit heavier than the other two, and as a result is usually only used for the very heavy arrows such as the 1/4lb plate-cutter arrows, while Ash is used commonly for 3/8" parallel shafts to make the EWBS/BLBS Standard arrow, and Poplar (or Aspen) is used for the Tudor arrows, as the majority (by a long way) of arrows found on the MR were made from Poplar. It can take the half inch diameter without being overly heavy.
An arrow of that length would require a very long draw
The 32" draw is standard for medieval archery - it's a very different technique and approach to hunting or target archery, and requires the archer to be shooting "in the bow" as it were - this means the natural anchor isn't near the face but right back by the collar bone of the string-hand side. Most people can get 32" using the correct technique, but as the bow weights increase the compressive forces shorten the draw somewhat.