I've got a Nikon Buckmaster 6-18x40 plex. When I got the thing, the manual explains how it adjusts in MOA (1/8 MOA clicks). I took this for granted for some time now. I later noticed that my turrets are marked 1click=1/8"
I figured that they put that there for the "shooters' minute" deer hunters or something, but then started wondering about the discrepancy. If you go to just about any website selling these scopes they all advertise MOA adjustment. For a while now I convinced myself that was so and left it at that w/o doing any tracking test.
My curiosity got the best of me this week and I thought I'd settle this for myself. I emailed the Nikon customer service and asked for the click value of my particular scope. The answer I got was still just as vague.
"well your scope will adjust one inch at 100yards, so one click moves the reticle 1/8"
"one eighth of what?" I went on to explain that I was needing an angular measurment value and that yardage shouldnt be involved, yaddah yaddah yaddah, we all know the deal.
"well is it MOA or IPHY?"
Finally today I got an answer today that said "you are right, your scope adjusts in IPHY. The user manual shouldn't say MOA"
Now I dont really care either way, with my plex reticle I dont have to match turrets to anything (I can just as easily print out dope data in IPHY as I can MOA), but I think it's still nice to know what my scope adjusts in. My concern is that people might be buying a product advertising one thing and dealing in another, and why would a user manual say one thing and the product behave differently. I know I'm talking about a .047 discrepancy (i'm sure Lindy can come up with a error percentage), so am I out of line or something? I'm not trying to bash a product either, because it has performed well enough so far.
your thoughts?
I figured that they put that there for the "shooters' minute" deer hunters or something, but then started wondering about the discrepancy. If you go to just about any website selling these scopes they all advertise MOA adjustment. For a while now I convinced myself that was so and left it at that w/o doing any tracking test.
My curiosity got the best of me this week and I thought I'd settle this for myself. I emailed the Nikon customer service and asked for the click value of my particular scope. The answer I got was still just as vague.
"well your scope will adjust one inch at 100yards, so one click moves the reticle 1/8"
"one eighth of what?" I went on to explain that I was needing an angular measurment value and that yardage shouldnt be involved, yaddah yaddah yaddah, we all know the deal.
"well is it MOA or IPHY?"
Finally today I got an answer today that said "you are right, your scope adjusts in IPHY. The user manual shouldn't say MOA"
Now I dont really care either way, with my plex reticle I dont have to match turrets to anything (I can just as easily print out dope data in IPHY as I can MOA), but I think it's still nice to know what my scope adjusts in. My concern is that people might be buying a product advertising one thing and dealing in another, and why would a user manual say one thing and the product behave differently. I know I'm talking about a .047 discrepancy (i'm sure Lindy can come up with a error percentage), so am I out of line or something? I'm not trying to bash a product either, because it has performed well enough so far.
your thoughts?