In 109 the cannon shoots straight at the center of the main lines in targeting board as the cross suggests and the drop is 11cm at 100 meters as the black spot suggests. The sight's assembly height is 74,5 cm and in actually points down to height of 5cm in 100 meters. That means that the use of stadia marks are up to pilot's discretion but he knows that the cannon shoots to the center of the reticle at around 140 meters where the Hx is roughly the same for both the cannon and for Revi, and the second crossing point is somewhere around 400-500 meters due to ballistic arching. Between those distances he can use the stadia marks above the center of the reticle to estimate how high the rounds fly before arching down again. Beyond the second convergence point at 400-500m he can again use the lower stadia marks to estimate the drop.
Ta uses the same method as the 109 because of the center cannon which is not adjustable. The 190 has more freedom to adjustments and it uses the Revi line of sight as a reference and all the weapons can be adjusted to match that.
I haven't noticed how it is done in AH though. Bustr, do you mean that in AH the cannon shell, whether it is 20 or 30mm does not cross the sight line twice if it is "converged" to 100 or 400 yards? Because in both cases it should.
-C+
PS. The picture of the periscope that we saw earlier is used to point the cannon to center of the targeting board and with adjustable guns it can be used to optically set the hitting point to the right point in targeting board, however, it was preferred to check the calibration with live ammo as the optical system was not very accurate.