You're welcome, HughC.
Yes, this is why it can be helpful to have a full sibling do the test as well. I paid for my brother's test, mailed it in, and did all the online stuff, which meant that all my brother had to do was spit into the tube and give it back to me in its box.
I've just looked up a known 2nd cousin in a different branch of my family. His grandmother was my grandmother's sister. My brother shares 234 cM with him, and I share 172 cM with him. Ancestry estimates that my brother is this man's 2nd cousin but that I am this man's 2nd cousin 1x removed or 1/2 2nd cousin. In reality, I'm his 2nd cousin.
Even though I've seen posts by people who say they have easily solved the mystery of their great-grandfather's unknown bio dad, or their mystery 3x-g-grandmother, etc., this hasn't been the case for me.
I recently opted to spend the money on a subscription to Ancestry, plus the additional subscription required to use their "Pro Tools," and it has been worth it for me in this one mystery DNA case because it has enabled me to compare the results of various DNA matches between me and my brother.
The DNA mystery cousin in question doesn't have a tree on Ancestry or anywhere else, which made it a lot more difficult to figure out the relationship. Being able to see the matches that this cousin and I have in common, and the matches that this cousin and my brother have in common, and then to do that with all of those various matches, has helped to solidify my case. In the end, though, it seems that it will still come down to my best guess.
(It would help if this man would see and respond to the messages I've sent him via Ancestry and Facebook, and then if his mother or her sister would do the DNA test, but I'm not holding my breath. He hasn't been on Ancestry in over a year and I don't know if he ever checks his PMs on Facebook.)