Hi Ghassan, many thanks for posting, your contributions to newtonian collimation are much appreciated! I have read your threads on CN and posts here and on Stargazerslounge. I have to admit I am still digesting your postings on CN!
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How far off? This could definitely impact the quality of your view.
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I measured the placement of the original spot(a dodgy hand-cut lopsided(not equilateral) triangle) with a steel rule with 0.5mm graduations gently placed over the mirror. The rule is double sided and I used the reflection of the scale on the backside of the rule(lining them up with the scale on the topside) to eliminate parallax error due to the mirrors sagitta.
The rule was randomly placed (though it was checked to be on diameter) and I measured the spot as being out ~0.5mm, I then rotated the cell(incl. mirror) 90 degrees and measured again, this time it was 1.5mm out. I could've continued around the mirror to find the maximum but that would've been pointless.
On a 154mm mirror, this (and the wonky triangle) was enough for me to remove the old spot and place a new 'hotspot'.
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2- Accuracy of DSC (if present) will be impacted as the angle between the optical and OTA axes change
3- If the OTA opening is tight or if the OTA has baffles then vignetting might be a possibility.
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Pardon my ignorance, what is DSC? (EDIT:
Nevermind, found it in Catseye/Pensack's guide, guess I must have ignored it because I don't have Digital Setting Circles 
)
Yes there was vignetting by the tube when the offset was toward the focuser.
The tube is 190mm inside diameter with a 154mm mirror, the focuser centre is 180mm from the front of the tube.
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What makes you believe you have a collimation issue? It is the quality of your image or is it based on the reflections you see via your Catseye collimation tools? Which Catseye tools do you have?
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Based on not being able to get the reflections lined up no matter how much I fiddle with the mirror. Also because some corners of my images show more coma than other corners, so the focuser is possibly not perpendicular to the tube, tho maybe this could be due to collimation not being spot-on yet?

If I remove the autocollimator from the focuser and hold it by hand above the focuser drawtube and carefully moving the autocollimator around, I can get all reflections to line up perfectly thru the on and off-axis pupil holes.
I think some of my issues are due to the autocollimator being about 85mm inside the focal plane(reflection '2' is grossly enlarged), I am machining a spacer today to move the autocollimator out to the focal plane.
My tools are home-made on my lathe, they are equivalent to a Blackcat XL and an Infinity XLK with your offset viewing pupil.
Their accuracy is fine, I have tested the autocollimator as you described in a post on Stargazers Lounge(
Here). There is zero image shift of the hotspot reflections when I rotate the autocollimator in the focuser.