How big is the circle of every target? How far away is every target? It's not possible to have one offset that handles all situations. ![]() No one (intentionally) makes sights that let you aim at the bottom and have the point of impact magically arrive in the middle. If you do aim at the bottom, then your groups should appear at the bottom. If you are standing seven yards away from a man-sized silhouette with a big circle in the middle to indicate center of mass, you should be aiming at the middle of the circle (the center hold in the image), not the bottom. Ideally, your groups should appear at the bottom of the bullseye. The reason is that you can see the edge of the bullseye more clearly than you can see the middle of it. The bullseye is an inch or a little larger. ![]() ![]() What you are calling a 6 o'clock hold is the normal sight picture for target shooting with a bullseye. This is also true if you are lining up dots on the front and rear sights. If your sights are properly adjusted for the ammunition you're shooting and the range you are shooting, and you are shooting correctly without any kind of flinch or handicap, then the point of impact should theoretically be inline with the top of the front and rear sights.
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