How do the elevation and windage turrets feel on the Minox? My elevation turret is more tactile and audible than my windage.
Oh boy, you just opened a can of worms. Some say Minox has the worst turret feel ever, others say it is better than most and still others... well you get the point. Turret "feel" is very much based on preference. I wrote a response to Minox turrets last year where I recommended a "Snipers Hide Turret Test", take two rifles with two different scopes (one being the Minox in your case) and have a buddy with a stopwatch time you. Have your buddy write down 10 different sets of numbers that would represent targets at different distances, these would equate to mil values so an example might be - 4.2, 8.9, 0.3, 6.7, 9.4, 12.8, 5.0, 18.3, 7.5 and 2.9. You would want a completely different set of numbers for the other scope but along the lines of the same range so maybe within the same mil value but different 1/10 mil values. You get setup in prone with the rifle in the ready position and have your buddy start the stop watch when he or she calls out the first value, you then dial your scope to that value, breathe, pull the trigger (dry fire of course) and cycle the bolt, once your buddy sees you cycle the bolt they then call out the next number and you do this for all ten values and after you've cycled the bolt for the last time they stop the stop watch. Now you get setup with the next rifle and scope (preferably a rifle that is same type as the previous - in other words don't do this with one short action and one long action because that could affect your time) and run the same test again. Now do different numbers and the tests in reverse (so the first rifle you test second and the second you start with) and run the tests again. Do this four times to hopefully reduce variables and now divide each rifles time by 4 and this will give you the average. Does one scope stand out significantly above the other? This could indicate a better scope for you and your ability to dial accurately under stress (you are being timed after all). As an additional test, swap places with your buddy and you now time him through the same course and you might find that he/she does better with the "other" scope.
For me personally, this would be a better evaluation of the turrets than "how do they feel" because the ability to quickly and accurately dial elevation is more important than "this turret feels better than that turret", that may certainly be the case (that one feels better to you) but what good does a better feeling turret do you if it causes you to sometimes have a slower response time. My guess is this, between the upper level scopes I would imagine there is not that much of a difference in the ability to accurately dial elevation. For some the MTC turrets on some Schmidt & Bender scopes may cause over travel when going past the heavier mil clicks and then having to dial back, for others it may be turrets with greater than 10 mil adjustment per rev cause over-travel because the clicks are more tightly packed together and so forth, but our bodies have an amazing ability to compensate for mechanical deficiencies and with training and muscle memory we can get past many shortcomings.
Here's something else I have noticed, at almost 50 years old my eyes aren't like they used to be. Eye doc still says I have fantastic 20/15 vision but my ability to focus on near objects has deteriorated over the past 3 years and requires me to wear reading glasses when I read, this has also impaired my ability to lift my head off the cheek rest and be able to read the numbers on the turret, I literally have to pull my head away before I can read those numbers. If I were to shoot competitively I would probably benefit from the Revic PMR 4.5-28x56 which has the mil values built into the HUD while looking through the scope, in fact, this would allow me to dial without having to pull my head away from my cheek weld at all, I can see a definite advantage in competitive situations with that solution.