Re: question about range estimation
What the heck have you been reading?? It's not "easier" to range at 10x. Like said above, the magnification power where the reticle is set up to be accurate is where you want to range at. If your scope reticle is on the second focal plane, this means when you change magnification, the size of the mil-dots will change in relation to the size of your target in the scope. You can't use this to range without extra math. If your scope is second focal plane, I bet anything that the correct magnification for ranging will be either 10, 12, or 14x. Larger magnifications are easier to use to range the target, as the mildots are larger and easier to divide up mentally.
I'm not sure what 10truck is actually trying to say. If he is saying make a target at 100 yards with marks with 3.6" BETWEEN the marks, and line up your reticle and change power until the space between the marks equals the space between the dots, center to center, than yes that's correct. If he is saying make a 3.6" dot and have one mildot cover that dot perfectly, then that is completely wrong.
If you actually want to range with mildots, STOP USING YARDS AND INCHES. Use the metric system like the rest of the world, so you can say, "hey, that target is 50cm(.5 meters) wide, and measures 1.2 mils. .5/1.2 = .416 = 416 meters. One piece of simple division, no multiplying by 27.777 or 54.444 or any other dumb number.