Iglow,
I know this doesn't answer your original question directly, and it's a topic I've discussed many times, but for the newer members I'll repeat myself.
I wrote an article about this for Quality Whitetails magazine, but I cannot find my digital copy. But the gist of the article was how we began to see/kill the mature bucks using our place. Because these animals are highly sensitive to hunting pressure, and because I had earlier done an analysis of our older buck sighting rates that showed they began to decline rapidly after a stand had experienced as little as 12 hours of hunting time, I started working on a plan to find the lowest pressure areas of our property. By adding up the total hours of hunting time for every stand location we hunted in the last three years, I could build a "topographic map" of the hunting pressure that had been applied to the property over that timeframe. This "hunting pressure topo map" showed high pressure areas as hills, and low pressure areas as valleys. Once we had located all the low pressure areas, we would move at least one stand into each before the season started. Often, there would be no buck sign in these areas (that's why they hadn't been hunted). But by using our knowledge of how bucks use terrain and habitat, we would place the stand to cover what we believed would be the highest odds buck travel route through the area.
At first, it was very difficult to convince ourselves to hunt these stands. There was no sign. Other parts of the property were crawling with sign. But once we started to force ourselves to hunt them from time to time it didn't take long to realize ALL of our mature buck sightings were coming from these stands. But the hunter choosing one of these stands had to be prepared for long sits seeing nothing - not a deer. The areas were devoid of sign because other deer didn't use them. But mature bucks had learned from their previous years of survival how to avoid hunters by finding and using these low hunting pressure areas in their daily travels. Someone hunting one of these stands would see almost no deer, until they saw a mature buck. Basically, ALL we saw from these stands were mature bucks. The encounters were rare, but mature buck sightings were almost exclusive to these "low pressure area" stands.
We still use this technique to locate stands. Now at least half of these stands each year will be total busts. But the other half...