Mr. UML
Member
@brockel - I don't disagree. I honestly have never been a big fan of FFP, but some people swear that it's the cat's ass for doing long-range shooting. I'm no expert in this area, but I've heard some people say that the lines on the vertical axis account for the same value of drop whether it's at 5x or 40x, whereas the drop value is inconsistent when using SFP. I have no idea if that's true or not. When I sight in a scope, I target shoot to figure out how many lines down correspond to what distances. It would be my expectation that the # of lines down would be true at any level of magnification, but maybe I'm wrong.
@Dave N - I'm not shooting a paper bullseye at 300 yards. I'm shooting a 6" gong. And I'm shooting over open farmland. It's not always easy to tell the deer to come closer
@MThuntr - I personally don't like that reticle given the transition from the small crosshair to the other lines on the scope. It's hard for me to count the lines underneath it (when they're in black) vs. the red crosshair. I'd rather it be consistent.
@Dave N - I'm not shooting a paper bullseye at 300 yards. I'm shooting a 6" gong. And I'm shooting over open farmland. It's not always easy to tell the deer to come closer
@MThuntr - I personally don't like that reticle given the transition from the small crosshair to the other lines on the scope. It's hard for me to count the lines underneath it (when they're in black) vs. the red crosshair. I'd rather it be consistent.