- Joined
- Oct 22, 2014
- Messages
- 10,414
Have you guys found in courses that it’s too time intensive or impractical to turn illumination on when the terrain is broken or difficult to pick up reticle?
No. There are two issues-
1). Usability to aim in low light. This is somewhat solved by illuminated reticles. However, that is a poor solution for the fundamental problem, which is-
2). Reticles designed for how flat range, bright light; and/or for how people think they shoot, not how they actually shoot. Both the Mil-C and Mil-XT are thin, lack clear bold brackets to drive your vision to center, and have unneeded complexity for killing animals.
The Mil-C and especially Mil- XT, as well as others like them have 0 advantages for general hunting- even longer range hunting, on animals. .2 mil ticks are nice, however far from needed, and 10+ mils of elevation marks below center is totally wasted for hunting, and for nearly everyone- including competitors for shooting.
A straight conventional mildot reticle is a far better general killing reticle than all the tree and thin PRS reticles made. Even deer vitals are relatively are large targets- 12” is .5 mils at 666 yards, and .4 mils at 833 yards. Even 1 full mil between marks is easily and near instantly broken down to within .1 mils for holding wind, and a .5 mil hash reticle is the same for less than .1 mil precision.