I've installed more than one c-band system by siting UP the center polar mount, and aiming it for when Polaris (North star) is in the bore site at the proper time of night for the location.
If you do this carefully, you'll be almost dead-on very quickly.
I used this technique when I set up my 8.5 ft Birdview last winter, and had excellent results.
I used a piece of conduit to sight Polaris. The conduit was attached to the dish, exactly parallel with the elevation axis. To get my sight tube to the correct elevation for Polaris, I used a digital inclinometer and adjusted the elevation axis to set the sight tube to my latitude. I then rotated the dish on the pole to get Polaris in the sight tube.
Moving the digital inclinometer to the elevation axis, I adjusted the elevation axis to the correct number for my latitude. The built in declination was about right for my latitude, so I left it as is.
Running the dish west about 1 degree to 107.3 (my southern most satellite) Anik F1r came booming in. I tweaked the elevation a bit, but wasn't able to make much improvement. I then headed east to check the tracking and things where looking good until I got to 55.5W where I could tell the dish was starting to fall off of the arc a bit. Continuing on to 37.5W I still had signal, but much weaker. So I rotated the dish on the pole a bit to peak it up. Checked the tracking through the whole arc and it looked good.
A few weeks later I put a Ku Band feed on the dish and the tracking, while not perfect, was pretty good across the entire arc.
BTW, Polaris is not exactly at the North Celestial Pole, so I used this web page to find when it was either above or below the North Celestial Pole. For best results, avoid doing the alignment when Polaris is east or west of the North Celestial Pole.
http://www.trutek-uk.com/takahashi/polarisfinder1-2en.htm
A few photos