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The Range
Rifle & Shotgun Discussion
Bushnell 4200 Tactical?
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<blockquote data-quote="buster11" data-source="post: 1000616" data-attributes="member: 4047"><p>I think one advantage of mil/mil or moa/moa based scopes is in some competitions they allow a sighter shot. You shoot at the bull and use your reticle to measure how far you are off. Lets say you didn't dial enough elevation and and you wind call was dead on. Hold on origanal point of aim and use reticle to measure, if your 3 mills lowl, you dial exactly 3 mills up on you scope and you're done. This assumes you can see your point of impact. If you have a mill base ret, and moa knobs, knowing your exactly 3 mills low doesn't help you much unless you want to convert mills to moa. I'm sure this could have been explained in a much simpler way. This could be applied in many different situations.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="buster11, post: 1000616, member: 4047"] I think one advantage of mil/mil or moa/moa based scopes is in some competitions they allow a sighter shot. You shoot at the bull and use your reticle to measure how far you are off. Lets say you didn't dial enough elevation and and you wind call was dead on. Hold on origanal point of aim and use reticle to measure, if your 3 mills lowl, you dial exactly 3 mills up on you scope and you're done. This assumes you can see your point of impact. If you have a mill base ret, and moa knobs, knowing your exactly 3 mills low doesn't help you much unless you want to convert mills to moa. I'm sure this could have been explained in a much simpler way. This could be applied in many different situations. [/QUOTE]
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