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I understand the difference between the two. Just wondering if there was any reason why a MOA scope would be worse than MRAD for NRL22 specifically.I can’t tell what you are asking. If you are asking about MOA vs MIL, it is just a unit of measure, so it is purely user preference. Just being MOA doesn’t really affect it beyond you being able to follow it.
Both of those are good to go on it.Magnification and parallax range (especially lower parallax) would be important to me if buying a scope for a rimfire rifle.
There's nothing about MOA scopes that will put you at a disadvantageI have no experience with MOA scopes, but have the opportunity on a good deal on one. Is there anything about MOA that would really hold it back in NRL22?
I’m guessing the number of clicks when dialing up and back down?
I shoot NRL22 and have several rifles set up for that. I personally prefer the MOA system for NRL22, the furthest you’ll ever dial is 7 MOA for the 100 yard stages. The bulk of the distances are at 25, 35, 60, 75, 90, and 100 yards.Thank you all for the replies, I just wanted to know if there was anything I wasn’t aware of
Number of clicks is really irrelevant. Yes, your scope will have more clicks with a scope that has 1/4 MOA adjustments than a scope with .1 mil adjustments. For example, if you are zeroed for 50 yards with your 22lr, you will need about 2.3 mil adjustment or 8 moa adjustments. Your aren't going to count out 23 clicks on the mil or 32 clicks on the moa, you're going to dial to the closest whole number (or half if your mil scope is marked for it) and then count in the remainder from there. So in the mil you'd dial in 2 mils, then .3 more, on the moa, you'd go straight to 8 moa (if it were 8.25 you'd go to 8 moa plus dial another 1/4).I understand the difference between the two. Just wondering if there was any reason why a MOA scope would be worse than MRAD for NRL22 specifically.
Example I can think of is number of clicks to get the same amount of correction