Pop quiz

clayne_b

Gunny Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Nov 18, 2009
1,158
1
40
Saratoga Springs, Utah
Help me figure out how much adjustment this is please.

Bulldozer is 120 yards away. Mil value is Half so 1 Mil is really 2.

Here it is zeroed out

2d40cdb1.jpg


Here is the total adjustment used for shooting 500 yards with the .22lr

086e94b6.jpg


Also I am not using the scope for this adjustment. it is all in the base.

referance Picture, 1 mil= 2 mil

638b7859.jpg




I came up with 25 mil
So if 25 mil at 120 yards is 108 inches?
then 108x 500yards is 540 inches so that's 45 feet of drop?

 
Re: Pop quiz

Sorry let me try and explane better.

The dozer is just a point of reference and is 120 yards away

Pic 1 is where my 50 yard zero is

Pic 2 is where my 500 yard zero is with the gun not moved.

Mils are correct at 12x but i have it on 6x to get more of it in view

So what i am trying to figure out is how much that movement is to see how much drop it takes to shoot 500 yards.
 
Re: Pop quiz

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: coryj</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Question #2:

If a train leaves chicago traveling 60 mph... what time is it in boston? </div></div>

LOL i always hated that question.

Why are you shooting at a bulldozer? jk
 
Re: Pop quiz

Ok....
1 mil = 3.6" @ 100 yards
1 mil =4.32" @ 120 yards

I read 10 MILS difference between your 2 pictures
4.32" x 10 = 43.2" @ 12x
4.32" x 20 =86.4" @ 6x
86.4" @ 120 yards
86.4" x 5 (500 yards) = 432" of Bullet Drop

Is that what your looking for?
 
Re: Pop quiz

I'm new to reticle ranging so bear with me but...

Couldn't you just get a total mil-reading of the different zeroes (~25mils +/-) and then just apply that to 500yds directly rather than converting mils to inches at 120yds THEN to 500yds?

If all it is essentially an angle measurement, I see no point in adding a step.
 
Re: Pop quiz

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Seth8541</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Ok....
1 mil = 3.6" @ 100 yards
1 mil =4.32" @ 120 yards

I read 10 MILS difference between your 2 pictures
4.32" x 10 = 43.2" @ 12x
4.32" x 20 =86.4" @ 6x
86.4" @ 120 yards
86.4" x 5 (500 yards) = 432" of Bullet Drop

Is that what your looking for?
</div></div>

Yes, I read 12.5 Mil from roof to the bottom of that hub
 
Re: Pop quiz

1 mil @ 100 yd = 3.6"
X 25 = 90" @ 100 yd
X 5 = 450" @ 500.
That 120 yard reference is just adding confusion. It confused me the first time around, now I see what you're trying to do.
 
Re: Pop quiz

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: kraigWY</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Don't know how it is in Utah, but in Wyoming you shoot somebodys equipment, things are gonna get real western. </div></div>
That's exactly what I was thinking. Why are you shooting at tractors?
 
Re: Pop quiz

If you absolutely need to include that 120 yard reference point, it works like this:
1 mil @ 100y = 3.6"
25 mils @ 100 = 90"
X 1.2 for 120y = 108"
Here's where people are getting confused. 500/120 = 4.1667. You guys keep using 5 with the 120 yard reading.
108" X 4.1667 = 450" at 500y.

or 37.5 feet.
 
Re: Pop quiz

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Johnnycat</div><div class="ubbcode-body">If you could move the bulldozer to 100 yards it would make things easier. </div></div>

I probably have a key from back when was an equipment operator... But the police station is 2 buildings away and i dont think they would like it if i were bombing that thing around at night.... HA HA