Hello Brother,
I wish I could say I chose my Avatar for a reason you so eloquently stated, but in fact I did it because in the 18th century, that was the common name for a military armorer. I was both a standard and then a NM armorer as a career Marine and we built the NM, Sniper and Special Purpose weapons for the Corps. As part of the black powder hobby, I have done similar work on 18th and 19th century repro and original guns since 1974.
You are correct the
traditional 6 o'clock hold is not the best for hunting, but there is a way it is ideally suited for sighting in for point of aim shooting, that most people prefer for hunting. I wish I could say I thought up the following entirely, but in truth it was only something I adapted.
First, I don't really care what the proper use of bullseye targets I buy, but I want at least a 6" and preferably 8" or 10" aiming black on them. I prefer the 8" because that to 10" is the killing zone on a deer.
I buy Avery 1" round dot, peel and stick labels and put that on the center or X Ring of the target. The reason for this is because it is in bold contrast and can be clearly seen at 100 yards. BTW, I tried blaze orange color dots and found they did not work nearly as well as plain white. These dots will stay put on the target even when you put 10 rounds of .45 acp or 7.62mm in them or virtually any ML caliber. (Oh, I have also cut 1" squares by eye from 1" wide masking tape and used them when I run out of the dots a couple of times and had to go zero a gun before I could buy more dots. They don't stay on the targets as well when hit, but it is better than nothing.)
Avery Printable Mailing Seals, 1" dia., White, 15/Sheet, 40 Sheets/Pack, (5247) | OfficeSupply.com
I then use a 6 o'clock hold on the dot in the center of the aiming black, though some folks use the center of the dot. This gives you a smaller area to aim at and that makes your groups tighter, as well as giving you a much more effective point of aim for hunting.
OK, since this post is long, I'll add a Part II, so I don't mess up and lose this typing.
Gus