Well mby not exactly. There are scopes that are inches per 100 yds (IPHY) and there are those (most of them) that actually do it in true MOA. Small difference yes but at distance it will add up. Ballistic apps will give you the choice between MOA and IPHY. Swarovski is an IPHY manufacturer. Also note there have been MIL scopes that don't conform to what we consider std MIL's (NATO mil). March used true mil's (instead of the more std NATO mil) when they first came along and you have to use an offset value (~.98) to get them to produce a correct drop chart for those scopes. Current March's are NATO mil.Not to mention even when you dial in MOA your scope only adjusts in .250 increments anyway so most of the time you dialing in a small degree of error
Your conversion value changes with yardage. MOA doesn't. So if you're thinking of drop as 7 inches at 400 yards, you have to first convert your adjustment from 1 inch at 100 to 4 inches at 400 and then dial 7 clicks. If you're thinking of drop as 1.75 moa at 400 yards, you just have to dial 7 clicks.Thats why most people dont convert it, they just think in terms of 1moa=1" per 100yds, theres still no math or conversions involved
No, you have a major gap in your understanding of this. At 1000 yards there is a .47" difference per minute. My .308 needs 28ish MOA correction at a grand, so that's over 13" of error. That is definitely significant.At 1000yds there is less than a 1/2" difference!!! I wouldn't call that very significant. My BR4 rangefinder gives me my solution in MOA, my scope dials in .25 MOA increments just like most scopes that use yds dial in .25 increments. So if my solution requires 4.35 MOA adjustment you have to dial up or down .15 moa, take your pick.
1 moa is 1.047", 10 moa =10.47". So if you compare 1" at 100 yds to 1 moa, 10 moa would equal 10.47 " at a 1000yds
Sure, in that context, I will definitely drop the 0.047. That's not the context that the question was being asked in though. The context was regarding dialing corrections at distance, where it absolutely does matter.If you are looking at a buck at 500 yds and his rack width spans 5moa in your scope, how wide is the buck? Hoow about a buck at 1000yds that spans 3 moa, how wide is he?
The balistics apps I have seem to be very good for bullet drop. The jury is still out on windage corrections due to a cross breeze.Are these ballistic apps really that accurate? I know I would have to practice and double check everything but it sounds too easy.
The reason I’m doing all of this is my son and I are going Caribou hunting in 2025 in the Northern Brooks Range Alaska. I have read that some of the shots are up to 500 yds away. I know that is not a lot for you all but it is to me. We both got Tikka 300 WM (not necessarily needed but we are going to do more hunts in the future) and I just laid away a Nightforce NX8 2.5-20x50f1. I could have got a cheaper scope but I wanted something very durable. If I have a nice scope I might as well learn how to use it.
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Are these ballistic apps really that accurate? I know I would have to practice and double check everything but it sounds too easy.
The reason I’m doing all of this is my son and I are going Caribou hunting in 2025 in the Northern Brooks Range Alaska. I have read that some of the shots are up to 500 yds away. I know that is not a lot for you all but it is to me. We both got Tikka 300 WM (not necessarily needed but we are going to do more hunts in the future) and I just laid away a Nightforce NX8 2.5-20x50f1. I could have got a cheaper scope but I wanted something very durable. If I have a nice scope I might as well learn how to use it.