Re: Ranging problems with Viper PST
Why the frik would you do it with mills, the scope is MOA/MOA and he measured the target & range in inch/yards respectively. That is something that will get people confused, and is an unnecessary source of error. MILS have nothing to do with this question.
Since the scope is FFP, we should assume for diagnostic purposes that the error lies elsewhere. If I were the OP, i'd start from scratch. You need to make sure that there is not an error in some other dimension here. Start with these:
*How did you measure the known distance to target? If you did it with a rangefinder, that could be the issue right there. LRF, especially the cheaper ones, can have a large beam divergence even at fairly close ranges. This means it may have been hitting something else near the target. If this is an outdoor range or just impromptu spot in the countryside, make sure you are not accidentally ranging brush, rocks, etc. Also, if the terrain is not level your rangefinder will give you an incorrect value if it is not a model that can adjust for angle of trajectory. You need to use one that gives a true ballistic solution, or be aware and convert your readout with an angle cosine formula based on a measured angle (via ACI, etc.).
*If you were shooting an existing emplaced target, like at a club range, I would take the time to measure it out with a tape and make sure the distance is actually what they said it is. Perhaps it is a bit off, or perhaps your shooting position was adjusted from where they measured the distance initially? Try to be as accurate as possible here with the tape measure. Get someone to help if necessary.
*If the error is not found in the "known" range, then remeasure your target and see if you made a mistake.
*If that's not it, make sure you are using the reticle correctly. Consult the product literature for the accurate dimensions of the reticle's scalar marks. DO NOT ASSUME that the distance between one set of marks is 1 MOA, it's not. On the PST's reticle it is as shown in this picture (courtesy of vortex):
Note that up to the ten MOA mark the subtensions are (2) MOA, after which they are (5) MOA. Make sure your math is right.
*Make sure you are using the forumla as KNIGHT posted it. What you initially posted is wrong, and it does make a difference in the math.
*Also remember that 1 moa @ 100 yards is actually 1.05 inches... it's a negligable difference at short range, but does contribute to a 5% error which needs to be corrected for @ longer ranges. If you dialed a shooting solution @ 100yds. for an uncorrected measurement, it would still likely be close enough for a hit, but be aware it's not correct mathematically.
I think this is where your error lies, as evidenced by this solution:
Formula: [known target size * 95.5] / [measured MOA corrected for 5% error] = range in yards
so: [8*95.5] / [8moa/1.05] = range in yards
thus: [764]/[7.62]= 100.26 yards