nope
screw field point into insert and hold the point with your fingers, apply slight heat to insert, heat glue stick and apply heated/softened glue to the end of warm insert, push insert into shaft about .100", apply a little heat to protruding insert and to the glue stick, apply glue to insert and twist insert into arrow shaft. Pinch the end of the shaft with your fingers to check the heat transfer and if it's too hot to hold your fingers against the arrow the insert was too hot. Small flame and most of the heat on the glue stick is the key, as well as a "low temp" hot melt. The old style ferul-tite from the 80's takes too much heat. Also, if you roll the end of the arrow shaft over your reloading case lube pad, the ring of excess glue will just pop off after it cools.
You want to clean the id of the shafts too, I dip them into mek but a bore brush will work; you're just cleaning up the dust from inside the shaft.
If you're never, ever, going to change inserts or add weights, etc you can use epoxy but it's a whole lot easier to just use the low temp. If you have some old arrows or trim ends from cutting shafts down you can practice and get comfortable with the process.
There's a problem if you can pull an insert out. We have horse mat behind our bales and my points never come out even when stuck in that. I would guess the shaft id was full of cutoff saw dust.