Thank you for the reply, Dan.
Actually, after looking at it again, the issue I'm working on (2,3-dibromopentane) does not line up the way I said. I'm doing an energy profile for the six different newman projections of this compound using C2 and C3 for the projection. This is the first time I've done one with two chiral carbons, so I'm not sure exactly how to compare the energy levels for some of them. I was wrong, when the hydrogen and Me group line up, and when the hydrogen and Et group line up, the other substituents are not the same in both cases I don't believe. With two achiral carbons, an energy profile is pretty simple. Starting with an anti staggered formation and working your way around, there is a symmetrical graph created; however, with 2,3-dibromopentane, I'm having trouble comparing the energy levels of the eclipsed formations. I know the one where the bromine, ethyl, and hydrogen eclipse the bromine, methyl, and hydrogen respectively, that's the highest energy, but the other two I'm not sure how to compare.
Thanks again to anyone who can help. I'm kind of new to organic chem, but it seems pretty interesting so far.