MRAD reticle yardage measuring: tips & experience

Don’t take shots I need a rangefinder for or use OnX for an estimation. If your limit is 400, you can just use some form of MPBR. Ranging with a reticle isn’t super great, but would likely be ok inside of 400. Have you had an RF take a dump? Maybe I’ve just been lucky, but I’ve never had one go down on me other than out of batteries. I have extra rangefinders I can leave in the truck too
Yes I have. Dropped one and it was done.
 
Don’t take shots I need a rangefinder for or use OnX for an estimation. If your limit is 400, you can just use some form of MPBR. Ranging with a reticle isn’t super great, but would likely be ok inside of 400. Have you had an RF take a dump? Maybe I’ve just been lucky, but I’ve never had one go down on me other than out of batteries. I have extra rangefinders I can leave in the truck too

Cold and blowing snow rendered my range finder useless a couple years ago.

We had a herd of elk in the open, well within effective range but far enough to need a reliable range. I hadn't thought much about learning to range with my reticle at that point. It's definitely in my list to practice more.
 
If my kill zone is 2-3x the 1 MRAD box, do I actually need a numeric range?
I track what you’re saying and I understand the “aim short, aim long” components of the reticle….
Not sure I understand it well enough to keep myself from doing something stupid.

Figured I’ll start from the ground up and learn analog distancing in a more nuanced way.

I like quick-drop a lot as well. Not just because it is applicable - but because memorized & instant known trajectory has helped me ….learn the language of trajectory more fluently….so to say.
This seems like an opportunity to gain some insight to distance in a similar fashion.
 
I have been bringing this with me on hunts or when I go shooting in mountains lately. Just stick it in back of bino harness. Easy access and it weighs next to nothing. I’ve been ranging stuff and then measuring for practice. So far what I’ve tried it with has been accurate.

 
I have been bringing this with me on hunts or when I go shooting in mountains lately. Just stick it in back of bino harness. Easy access and it weighs next to nothing. I’ve been ranging stuff and then measuring for practice. So far what I’ve tried it with has been accurate.

This seems pretty handy to practice with and have on hand. Really seems like a great way to establish baseline measurements for deer as well - reversing known ranges & MRAD to inches on chest.
 
I’m going to be doing this with whitetail and 18” chest. - realistically off of way more doe and immature bucks when practicing.

Did you find 14.5” for antelope applicable and accurate to any and all antelope? Just bucks? Or just adult antelope of either sex?

This will be done with a: mil R F1. Which has a 2 mil on 1/10ths scale. (Haven’t stated that yet).
I was hunting for an average male Antelope in WY. Chest measurements there average 14.5” from my research and limited actual measurements previously.

At the time of obtaining a range, the lighting was good with no obstructions to the visibility of the animal. The most important element of getting an accurate range was a rock solid rest. I was prone on the sloped berm of a dry canal, using a bipod and squeeze bag. I was very confident in my measuring of the Antelope’s chest with the reticle. With a less steady position I likely would not have felt good about the estimated range using this method.
 
I'm not sure if it's been mentioned already, but if you want to operate in meters instead of yards, the constant is 25.4 instead of 27.77, and the equation becomes:

Distance in meters = 25.4 * target height in inches / target subtension in mrad
 
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