I promise I'm not a dumbshit (dumbshits don't buy S&Bs from what I can tell). I have a S&B 5-25 PMII with the P4F reticle. The mil system is new to me however so the reticle just isn't making sense.
So you have some background, I have several Nightforces and have the MOA system down. I figured the only way to learn the mil system is to just buy the darn scope and figure it out.
I have no problem utilizing MOA optics or the process regarding drop charts and dialing my elevation to get to distance and the difference between FFP and SFP, of which this is the former.
I'm sure you're all familiar with the reticle, but here it is:
From what I've gathered, the spacing on the bottom (O, N, M, L) is for ranging people. This graphic is what I'm talking about.
The graphic makes sense...you bracket them however you can, realize the distance, then hold or dial and press the trigger.
I guess my first question is what is the distance from center of the reticle to the first horizontal hash below center? Or does S&B just assume you'll dial everything to the center?
Also, if you look at the chart at the bottom, it's in cm/100m or in/100y. The scope is in mils, so why does that matter? I guess I'm used to the Nightforce NPR-1 where the spacing is 1 MOA between hashes. The NF reticle reference chart also tells me all the spacing in the same format....MOA.
Anyway, I don't use inches when I'm dialing MOA...I use the reticle to gauge how much I'm off from my first shot (if any) and adjust to get me on target for my second shot. Of course, this is on full power because they're SFP (5.5-22x50 NPR-1, and 2.5-10x32 with NPR-2). Being that the S&B is FFP, I realize I can do that on whatever power I want.
Additionally the S&B adjusts .1 milrad at a time.
Looking at JBM ballistics, these are my options for selecting the units of drop:
Obviously it's not MOA or inches, but with the clicks equaling .1 mil, which one do I select?
So when I calculate on JBM, this is what I end up with:
Looking at the drop, I've selected it to be 1.00 mils. So I end up with nice numbers that I don't know how to find on the reticle.
I hope nobody thinks I'm dumb...I just need a push in the right direction.
I really appreciate the help,
Ed
So you have some background, I have several Nightforces and have the MOA system down. I figured the only way to learn the mil system is to just buy the darn scope and figure it out.
I have no problem utilizing MOA optics or the process regarding drop charts and dialing my elevation to get to distance and the difference between FFP and SFP, of which this is the former.
I'm sure you're all familiar with the reticle, but here it is:
From what I've gathered, the spacing on the bottom (O, N, M, L) is for ranging people. This graphic is what I'm talking about.
The graphic makes sense...you bracket them however you can, realize the distance, then hold or dial and press the trigger.
I guess my first question is what is the distance from center of the reticle to the first horizontal hash below center? Or does S&B just assume you'll dial everything to the center?
Also, if you look at the chart at the bottom, it's in cm/100m or in/100y. The scope is in mils, so why does that matter? I guess I'm used to the Nightforce NPR-1 where the spacing is 1 MOA between hashes. The NF reticle reference chart also tells me all the spacing in the same format....MOA.
Anyway, I don't use inches when I'm dialing MOA...I use the reticle to gauge how much I'm off from my first shot (if any) and adjust to get me on target for my second shot. Of course, this is on full power because they're SFP (5.5-22x50 NPR-1, and 2.5-10x32 with NPR-2). Being that the S&B is FFP, I realize I can do that on whatever power I want.
Additionally the S&B adjusts .1 milrad at a time.
Looking at JBM ballistics, these are my options for selecting the units of drop:
Obviously it's not MOA or inches, but with the clicks equaling .1 mil, which one do I select?
So when I calculate on JBM, this is what I end up with:
Looking at the drop, I've selected it to be 1.00 mils. So I end up with nice numbers that I don't know how to find on the reticle.
I hope nobody thinks I'm dumb...I just need a push in the right direction.
I really appreciate the help,
Ed