if the moose was shot sunday then yep! haha. thats a ND grand slam or something!!
im thinking we know the same person... that rifle has been busy1
im thinking we know the same person... that rifle has been busy1
I don’t really get the obsession for the 6.5. If it were me and I wanted to do a lot of shooting I’d pick up a .308. Or if I didn’t do a lot of shooting and wanted an all around rifle I’d go .270. Just my stance but the 6.5 if ballistically better but unless you have it in the back of your mind your gonna shoot 1000yrds. Which 99% of people buy one for and never shoot past 200..... go
Your comment is right on for the 200 and under crowd. For the well over 200 crowd, heavy for calibre, high BC bullets is why. Wind is your enemy, and these bullets help with that problem. If I was a WT MD only guy, I'd have a 6mm, 25 cal or 6.5. I'll single out the 25 though because no one has really developed heavy for cal, high BC bullets..........yet. You look at those heavy for cal offerings and tell me it's not enough pill to knock deer down. When you start talking elk, 6.5mm min and upward. Why wouldn't one want adequate pill weight and high BC bullet in the same package?
Only a little more money to get you to the Diamondback HP. For years I run the mildots. Now I have minute of angle reticles. Now Vortex PST first focal plane have the large diameter turrets like the Razors and you get 25 minutes of angle per revolution. I think they are trying to make sure I can't be happy more than one year at a time.
There are a number of advantages to the minute of angle reticles. If your program says that at 600 yards your 308 needs 16 minutes of come up you can dial or pic 16 minutes on the reticle and get a shot off faster. The other good thing if you're running a laser range finder and you know your deer is 655 yards and the width of his rack is 3.5 minutes of angle in your scope. Simply multiply 6.55 X 3.5 and you know the rack is 22.9 inches wide. You will never be that accurate, but you will know it's within an inch or two, somewhere in the 21 to 25 inch area. If your judgement is good you will be even closer.
600 max how do you come up with that?
what's the effective point blank range of a dirty/30? like 125 yards? I have no idea just guessing. it wouldn't be my first or even 30th choice for a western deer rifle that is fer sure and fer certain.
Yes I know Kirt, I have about ten mildots. I wish I could trade them all for minute of angle. As you say mile is ALMOST easier.You know you do the exact same with mils. They are both a unit of measure. If your program says 2.1 mils that is what you dial.
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I shoot both and mils is almost easier as it is a in 1/10ths to me but neither is better than the other
Yes I know Kirt, I have about ten mildots. I wish I could trade them all for minute of angle. As you say mile is ALMOST easier.You know you do the exact same with mils. They are both a unit of measure. If your program says 2.1 mils that is what you dial.
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I shoot both and mils is almost easier as it is a in 1/10ths to me but neither is better than the other
Yes I know Kirt, I have about ten mildots. I wish I could trade them all for minute of angle. As you say mile is ALMOST easier.
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Yes I know Kirt, I have about ten mildots. I wish I could trade them all for minute of angle. As you say mile is ALMOST easier.
Mils is more for people. One mil is 36 inches at 1000 yards. Interesting that the difference in height of people is mostly in leg length. From crotch to top of head most people are about 36 inches. Have you ever wondered why someone six inches shorter than you is about the same height when your sitting? The military developed the mil based on human body height. There is some difference between army mils and marine mils. One is based on tenths as you mentioned (most popular on civilian scopes) and the other is in eighths. One is round dots and the other football shaped. Some people prefer mils, but I find minute of angle much easier, especially for estimating rack size.
For a mil to estimate range you need to know the size of your target. A minute of angle will do the same thing. However if you have a laser range finder and know your tangle the minute of angle will tell you the size of your target. A mil will work, but minute of angle works for anyone with third grade math without Rambo training.
Oh, ok. I guess I have never seen a mil adjustment without mil dots. Who makes those, and why? What's the reason for having such an adjustment if it doesn't incorporate into the ranging system?Never said one thing about mil-dots they are obsolete. So my point stands
:;:thumbsup Years ago when we didn't have civilian mil dots I would set pumpkins at every 100 yards out to 600 yards. Then I would wrap white tape around my power ring on my 3X9 scope I sighted in at 200 yards and the post of the duplex crosshair hit at 300 yards on 9 power. Then I would move back to 400 yards and adjust my power until the duplex hit at 400 yards. I would write my yardages in red. Then I took a four inch plastic pipe 18 inches long (about the size of the average buck belly to back) and screwed it to a wooden stake. I set my scope on 3X and walked back until the pipe from top to bottom fit in between the crosshair and duplex post. Then 4X, then 5X and so on. I measured each of these out and wrote the yardages on my white tape in blue ink. If I can remember the 18 inch pipe fit at about 200 yards on 9X.Mil-Dots in a 2nd focal plane scope on it's LOWEST power setting are generally 3x more than their designated/calibrated "X" setting on a power ring. IE: SFP scope, 3.5-10 w/Mil-Dot calibrated for 1Mil @ 10x. Each Mil-Dot = 3Mils @ 3.5x,
Oh, ok. I guess I have never seen a mil adjustment without mil dots. Who makes those, and why? What's the reason for having such an adjustment if it doesn't incorporate into the ranging system?
I like the finer adjustment for small targets at long range. The way it is 1/4 inch click is often high and one click down is low on small targets at even 800 yards. One click for minute of angle is 1/4 inch while 1/10 mil is .36 inch.
I agree mil dots are obsolete, with the marine mil dots system going obsolete first. I would have to carry a calculator for a fast estimate of antler width and height. I guess if it's a half mil it's 18 inches wide at 500 yards which is easy, but .3 mils at 775 yards kind of clogs up my two brain cells. It takes a minute for me to come up with 27.9 inches. In my mind I have to first convert the mil to inches because even mil dots use the same measuring system. A mil is 3.6 inches at each 100 yard increment. It's just one more un-needed step. Maybe one of the guys in the military can chime in and bring us up to speed because I see new battle reticles that are not mil dot.
:;:thumbsup Years ago when we didn't have civilian mil dots I would set pumpkins at every 100 yards out to 600 yards. Then I would wrap white tape around my power ring on my 3X9 scope I sighted in at 200 yards and the post of the duplex crosshair hit at 300 yards on 9 power. Then I would move back to 400 yards and adjust my power until the duplex hit at 400 yards. I would write my yardages in red. Then I took a four inch plastic pipe 18 inches long (about the size of the average buck belly to back) and screwed it to a wooden stake. I set my scope on 3X and walked back until the pipe from top to bottom fit in between the crosshair and duplex post. Then 4X, then 5X and so on. I measured each of these out and wrote the yardages on my white tape in blue ink. If I can remember the 18 inch pipe fit at about 200 yards on 9X.