I know it sounds dumb to suggest that the gun makers don't know this but following their instructions for adjusting POI often leads to a frustrating game of hide-and-seek with your gun's point of impact. Adjusting a comb to change the POI and then adjusting a rib that pivots in the rear or center is double-adjusting. Moving either one changes POI so if you raise the comb to raise the POI and then lower the front of the rib to regain a figure-eight sight picture, you will move the POI higher yet.
Yes, you can spend the time it takes to MAYBE find perfect spots for the rib and comb that yield the right POI and the desired sight picture at the same time but that's not always possible. And then, if your gun is a combo with an adjustable rib on the single barrel and a fixed rib on the O/U set, all that goes for nothing when you change barrels, as the non-adjustable set isn't going to shoot to the same POI as the adjustable one.
It's this simple. Like all firearms with sights, your shotgun has two - the front bead and your eye. And like all firearms with sights, move either one and you change POI.
Quite often, the figure-eight sight picture is not obtainable with the desired POI. That's just how it is and it really doesn't matter as that center bead really serves no sighting purpose. In fact, I think it lends a false sense of security to gun fit. If you mount your gun and move your head down or up until the beads are in a figure-eight before calling for a target, you only have temporarily aligned the beads because as soon as you take your eye off the beads as you and your gun start moving toward the target, your head will return to its natural position and the beads will no longer be aligned in that all-so-important figure-eight. If you have to force it to happen, you're only kidding yourself.
Remember the two most important rules in shooting a shotgun - your gun has to shoot where you look and you have to look at the target. It doesn't matter if there is a gap between the neads or not or if the center bead is even there at all. In fact, a gap helps move the gun down away from your brain's view of the front bead through your eye.
Back when the Browning Plus guns came out, I watched two ATA All-Americans and state champions shooting their BT-99 Pluses for the first time. With the book in one hand and the wrenches in the other, they shot and adjusted for hours, never being able to get the guns shooting where they wanted. They moved the comb until the POI was right then moved the rib until the beads aligned, after which the POI was wrong again.
Soon afterward, I bought the first Citori Plus to come into the area strictly because it was a non-ported 32" gun. As I read the POI adjustment portion of the instructions, I realized what those two men were doing. Neither kept their guns long, saying they coud never get them to shoot where they wanted them to. I guess not - so much for following instructions, huh?
Ed