Yeah, I found this - but it isn't very clear to me how many minutes between the thin and thick parts of the reticle. Maybe i'm being dumb and need this explained to me like i'm 5The info should be on the manufacturer's website. I've printed off their spec sheets for a PM2 before.
You need this rather than the one you had
That's for a 4-16 zoom - but still doesn't help me.You need this rather than the one you had
.243What calibre are you shooting?
Following as I use the exact same.
That is for a 4-16x adjustable
Best I can find is the one for the L3 illuminated reticle - https://www.schmidtundbender.de/pho...midt-Bender-Datasheet-L3-FFP-8x56-Klassik.pdf
I cannot find an equivalent for the A7
What magnification are you using and is it SFP?That's for a 4-16 zoom - but still doesn't help me.
.243
By my calculation - a 4 to 5 MOA drop to 300yds
What magnification are you using and is it SFP?
A minute of angle is an inch or 2.5cm at 100yds. 72.5cm would be 29 MOA. This isn't exact for 110yds, but with respect, you're not going to be able to use a more precise conversion by eye anyway. Perhaps more useful is that the thickness of the bar is about 5MOA.I can't help bug think there is some math here which is escaping me.
As per title, fixed 8x56.
I did mange to find some info:
Distance between the bars: 145cm/100m
Bar: 14cm/100m
Crosshair: 1,4cm/100m
I'm thinking that between the bars is 145cm, that means that the vertical distance from the crosshairs to the bar is 72.5cm @ 100m. (110 yds)
Is it possible to convert this to MOA?
Still not sure of the maths.
If you use ballistic apps already then you can just tweak the input until it gives you an answer in MOA for 72.5cm.I can't help bug think there is some math here which is escaping me.
As per title, fixed 8x56.
I did mange to find some info:
Distance between the bars: 145cm/100m
Bar: 14cm/100m
Crosshair: 1,4cm/100m
I'm thinking that between the bars is 145cm, that means that the vertical distance from the crosshairs to the bar is 72.5cm @ 100m. (110 yds)
Is it possible to convert this to MOA?
Still not sure of the maths.
I have been using S&B scopes with this reticule for many years . The way to shoot with them is not dialling-in and its not about mill dots and lines . Its all about knowing how to set up maximum point blank range and knowing the drift . Familurise yourself with maximum point blank rage ( the imaginary pipe you shoot through ) . We are not shooting small mamals / birds nor are we shooting 500 yards plus with such kit ! However Zero your 243 -308 say at 200 yards you can easy hit any size of deer in the hart /lungs from 50-250 yds plus or minus depending on your ammo if your trigger finger and wind reading is on . TBF you dont even need a rangefinderA7 reticle looks like this:
View attachment 360176
Does anyone know how many minutes (or mrad's) there is from the crosshairs to where the reticle widens?
How do you all estimate your holdover assuming a 100yd zero and wanting to shoot say up to 300yds?
Having shot one for many years goes roughly like this @300m no matter what calibre you shoot, you’re going to be dropping somewhere between 10 and 15 inches, first of all you need to find out how fast your bullets going with your chosen weight find a ballistics program. I use the hornady one personally and have done for donkeys years. That will tell you what you’re roughly what your bullet drop is, and if you know your animals, you will know how big a drop depending on the size of the shoulder of the animal , personally, I’ve shot red deer out to just 400 m with one purely based on hold over into the engine roomA7 reticle looks like this:
View attachment 360176
Does anyone know how many minutes (or mrad's) there is from the crosshairs to where the reticle widens?
How do you all estimate your holdover assuming a 100yd zero and wanting to shoot say up to 300yds?
Yes 10-15 inches is about right. If I know the full MOA of the crosshair to the lower bar - I may be able to guestimate where on the reticle to hold over.Having shot one for many years goes roughly like this @300m no matter what calibre you shoot, you’re going to be dropping somewhere between 10 and 15 inches, first of all you need to find out how fast your bullets going with your chosen weight find a ballistics program. I use the hornady one personally and have done for donkeys years. That will tell you what you’re roughly what your bullet drop is, and if you know your animals, you will know how big a drop depending on the size of the shoulder of the animal , personally, I’ve shot red deer out to just 400 m with one purely based on hold over into the engine room


170 quid roughly to send your scope to schmidt and they will upgrade the turret to BDC style. Much better then estimating hold over on a reticle like that!
170 quid roughly to send your scope to schmidt and they will upgrade the turret to BDC style. Much better then estimating hold over on a reticle like that!