Re: Mills VS Metric ?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: maladat</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: TiroFijo</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Maladat, that is only another way to express click value that is 100% correct, and very practical to metric users (EVERYONE in the world but the good ol USA).
It only sounds stupid to non metric users...</div></div>
Yes, it is technically correct that .1 mil is 1cm @ 100m. I am quite comfortable with the metric system. It is still stupid to mark an angular adjustment based on specific linear measurements.
1cm @ 100m doesn't mean anything if you don't already know it's an angular adjustment (and 1cm@100m doesn't actually imply or have to be an angular measurement). If you don't know it's an angular adjustment, 1cm @ 100m could also mean 1cm @ 200m, or .5cm @ 200m, or -2cm @ 200m or 253.23416cm @ 200m (and one could build a sighting device which managed 1cm @ 100m and any one of the 200m values just given). It's an angular adjustment and should be marked as one. </div></div>
I'm an engineer and I can understand and use anything but most people don't. I agree it would be technically better to express it in angular units, but for 99% of metric users (this is, almost everyone but USA) the training is much faster expressing it "1 cm at 100 m". It is simple to understand and use (everyone knows is an angular subtension), that's the beauty of the metric <span style="font-weight: bold">decimal</span> system that goes hand in hand with mils.
Life is really easy if you have to train guys that use mils and meters, you don't have to explain what a MOA, radian or miliradian is, just:
"1 mil = 10 cm at 100 m, 20 cm at 200, and so on..." for the reticle
for the turrets: "1 click = 0.1 mil = 1 cm at 100 m, 2 cm at 200, and so on...".
then the ranging formula: range (m) = (target size (m) / mil reading) * 1000 and you are set
People instantly understand that reticle and clicks match, and use them accordingly. Of course come ups, wind corrections, hold offs, etc. are also in mils.