I've been shooting .36 navy revolvers for nearly 35 years and find it one of my most enjoyable hobbies. These are the most natural pointers that were ever produced and have a history that is unbelievable. This was the gun Colt used to correct the mistakes in enginering of the Walker and set the standard for revolver performance for the next 150 years.
The reason they usually shoot high at twenty five yards is because they are sighted for 75 yards with a full load(all the powder you can stuff in and seat the ball). These are guns designed for fighting plains Indians, shoot your rifle at 200 yards and use the pistol as he charges in, you'll have it out and fire the first shot when he hits about 75 yards.
Best load? An empty .38 special case of 3-F (25 grains?), press in the ball and coat the open cylender face with crisco. No corn meal except with reduced charges, and these guns were never intended to fire a reduced charge or target load. Full charge recoil is mild, so why bother? They were designed as a true fightin' gun to keep one alive during a violent time. I've worked on origionals that were still usable and in good working order after 150 years of use.
Note that most of the origional nipples were hollow tubes, for sure fire ignition, not the ones like we use today with the pin hole vent. When they droped the hammer they expected the gun to go boom in a major way, and save their life.
This gun is more powerful than a .380, about equil to the old .38 s&w, only slightly less punch than a .38 spl or 9mm and normally handles and shoots better than most "Modern" auto pistols or revolvers.
They actually work best with one carried on each side and a third stuck in the belt crossdraw. Three guns and 18 shots for less than the price of a new Glock or Baretta!