Is there anyone who prefers MOA vs MIls for hunting purposes?

There's these videos I've seen on youtube of carpenters, random people, etc. and they are told to pull a certain amount of inches out of a tape measure. This is a tape measure right in front of their face, just without being able to see the numbers, facing the back of the tape and reaching out and pulling it up.

The amount of folks who get within an inch when told to "pull out 12" is slim to none. Even guys who cut lumber nominally every single day.

And we have guys on here suggesting that folks hold 5" higher or lower on camouflaged deer/elk hair at 500 yards. It's honestly, asinine haha. Now if someone said, hold half target high, or half target low, or hold on the top of spine, etc. while still not "precise" at all, is at least something potentially "attainable".
A woman was wanting me to build her a new log home.
We started discussing dimensions.
She says, "I want a room where I can have a 40 foot dining table".
Me: 😳
I stepped off 40 feet.
Eight foot was closer to what she actually wanted.
 
that is only correct if the shooter spots and see’s their miss. Most guys shooting a magnum caliber in a lightweight rifle do not stay on target to spot the shot. Again I am not discrediting what you are saying because you are absolutely correct. But unfortunately the average situation is a secondary person calling out a correction that is more often than not an estimation of inches. Hence the ease of conversion being a positive benefit.
I’d say more of the MIL anxiety comes from the shooters looking at their 100 yard paper target 1 weekend before deer season. That target has 1” grids so they use that 1” = 1 MOA to adjust their zero not to call misses in the wind at extended distances.
 
Well, the radian is the angular unit adopted as part of the SI system, so it is metric.

There’s no fudge factor for pi. One radian is exactly the arc length along a circle, equal to 1000 yards at a radius of 1000 yards. And one milliradian is exactly an arc length of 1 yard at 1000 yards. The height at 1000 yards is approximately equal to the arc length, under the small angle approximation.
I seem to remember from my school days and that’s a bloody long time ago now, that the circumference of the Earth had something to do with working out the basis for the SI system please correct me if I’m wrong
 
Yes. You can change your adjustment factor with quick drop easily.


What about when you change bullets or some load component? Or a new lot of factory ammo?

Well I guess you could either change your Yardage tape or if you're in the field do the same with you adjustment factor. I.e. 400 yard tape - 2 clicks, etc. It's functionally the exact same thing.
 
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