Analysis:
The identical length in the minors is annoying. You have eleven top tricks and the possibility of another in clubs. But you can take the club finesse in either direction and have no way of knowing where the queen is. However, there is a simple end-play.
The idea is to draw trumps, eliminate hearts from both hands and eliminate diamonds from both hands while exiting for the end-play. The opponent who wins the diamond trick will have to concede a ruff and discard or give you a free club finesse. For this to work you must preserve the club holding in both hands and also have a short trump left in dummy.
Let’s check entries. We will need two entries to dummy to ruff out our hearts. One is ♥A itself and we must use that first. The other will be a trump. So, after winning the second trick, draw the remaining trump with the queen, play two rounds of hearts ending in dummy, ruff a heart, cross to dummy with a trump, ruff another heart, and exit with a diamond. Opponents are now successfully end-played, and you make your twelve tricks without needing to know where ♣Q is.