BDC vs Dialing for new hunter.

J.C.S

FNG
Joined
Oct 15, 2024
Messages
4
If you could go back and start over which would you go with? Should I learn to dial from the start?

I got the fever this year after going hunting this whitetail season. I just used an AR with a 1-6 lpvo.

Now I want a proper setup. I bought a Ruger American Gen 2 in 6.5 creedmoor but scopes are overwhelming. I would appreciate some guidance. I like simple but also believe in buy once cry once. I’d like to spend $600 or less but I’ll go more if it means less regrets.

I’d say most of my shots are 200 yds or less. Can’t imagine one being over 400.

I got a vortex viper hd 3-15 BDC on the cheap but I’m wondering if I should return it and go with something I can dial. But again I’m all new and don’t know anything.

I’ve read enough of the forum to prepare myself that the answer is the maven 1.2 lol
 

WyoBC_99

FNG
Joined
Dec 10, 2018
Messages
86
Location
Colorado
ohman If you can't imagine shooting past 400 anyway set up that viper and go. Figure out your maximum point blank range and set that up for the primary crosshair and then you can work up to using the BDC holdovers.
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2017
Messages
2,537
Location
San Antonio
I tried to like dialing and just don't care for it. A reticle with MOA hash marks does everything I need without monkeying with turrets. Most will tell you MOA is gay and if you're just starting out MIL is probably better but my brain works with MOA so that's what I use. 400 yards you don't need to dial anyway. I would however recommend a higher quality scope, see what you can get from Trijicon for example. edit: We have some BDC scopes as well and they work fine as long as you get used to them and the subtensions, shoot to verify where you're hitting.
 

RWT

WKR
Joined
Jul 4, 2022
Messages
399
Agree with statements above. I used holdover and BDC style retitles for 30’years of hunting. I am very comfortable to 400 using this method. That being said. Once I wanted to shoot further and at smaller targets I realized dialing is more accurate of a method.

At this point in your journey go holdover with a marked reticle. Mil or moa. Doesn’t matter. But MIL will be easier if you want to go last 400 and start dialing.

A suggestion that I took to heart was actually figuring out exactly what distance the hash marks on the reticle corresponds with that rifle and the ammo. I did this and would walk my shots in on clay pigeons. I found that the hash marks were close but varied enough from published/assumed data that the difference would cause a miss. Then I made a dope card that was taped on that rifle. When you do have the distance figured out. Don’t consider it factual until you hit 4 out of 4. (Or however many your rifle holds) clays.
 
OP
J

J.C.S

FNG
Joined
Oct 15, 2024
Messages
4
Agree with statements above. I used holdover and BDC style retitles for 30’years of hunting. I am very comfortable to 400 using this method. That being said. Once I wanted to shoot further and at smaller targets I realized dialing is more accurate of a method.

At this point in your journey go holdover with a marked reticle. Mil or moa. Doesn’t matter. But MIL will be easier if you want to go last 400 and start dialing.

A suggestion that I took to heart was actually figuring out exactly what distance the hash marks on the reticle corresponds with that rifle and the ammo. I did this and would walk my shots in on clay pigeons. I found that the hash marks were close but varied enough from published/assumed data that the difference would cause a miss. Then I made a dope card that was taped on that rifle. When you do have the distance figured out. Don’t consider it factual until you hit 4 out of 4. (Or however many your rifle holds) clays.
Thank you. Could you give an example of what you mean by a marked reticle?
 
Joined
Aug 10, 2015
Messages
2,923
Thank you. Could you give an example of what you mean by a marked reticle?
He means a reticle with known subtensions.

Your BDC reticle is roughly calibrated to sort of match up with most-ish center-fire rifles.

Your holds end up being random distances.

It probably has you zero at 200 so the marks are supposed to be 300,400, 500... Your numbers might be 316, 435, 548. Whatever...

If you get a reticle with usable hashmarks, you have to learn how your actual impacts correlate. At 400 yards my 6.5cm is a 2.2 mil correction.

It's a vastly better system, if your willing to think about it a little.

Your current scope would be just fine for short range whitetail hunting though too.
 
Joined
Mar 18, 2024
Messages
50
As stated above a good mil or moa reticle will be easier to find tune the shot yardage if you know your holds rather than guessing "eh I'll hold in-between the 2 marks on my BDC reticle and hope I'm right."

That being said most rifle maximum point blank ranges are between 250 and 300 yards ish... So if you don't anticipate shooting much over 200 then just aim center of vitals and pull the trigger and you'll hit vitals regardless of a BDC reticle or dialing.

I went through a similar conundrum and I've settle on a good mil reticle and dialing. I figured if my rifle has a maximum point blank range of 300 yards I don't have to do anything but point and shoot if they're with in that range. If they're past 300 yards I'm most likely not even on the deers radar so I can range, use a ballistic app, dial and shoot without it knowing I was there. The last hunt I did we sat across from a clearing and I ranged all the areas I thought I'd see deer and memorized the dials. When the deer popped out at 380 I already knew my dial for that and was able to dial and shoot fairly quickly.
 

liv3mind

FNG
Joined
Jan 21, 2025
Messages
7
Learn a system. Bdc is decent for quick engagement at semi known distance, not precision, unless your shooting at exactly its calibration spots your holding anyway. Bdc seems cool till you want More.
 
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