They’d be safer but still not necessarily good. The biggest problem IIRC (I haven’t touched GWizard in around a year and a half due to its uselessness) was that it liked high-axial, low-radial depth of cut and the Nomad 883 Pro hates that with a burning passion. What the 883 Pro liked was high radial. My understanding is that high radial is good because the cutting forces parallel to the cutting plane are substantially reduced, reducing the force pushing the endmill away from the workpiece.
Huge +1, this is a fabulous guide and I’d recommend reading it in full before you start screwing with feeds and speeds too much, otherwise you don’t really know what you’re doing (and that’s how I broke endmills).
Don’t apologize, this isn’t a PM