Re: Applying Reticle-Rangefinding?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lindy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Better to know how, and not need it, than to need it, and not know how.</div></div>Right. But, I'm afraid that it's worse than that: It's better to keep using it, and not end up needing it, than to never use it and lose the ability to do it well.
To answer the original question: It depends on the skill level of the officer and the professionalism of departmental training.
Many officers I know are not trained adequately, and even if they learned how, once, at a class, they don't practice it enough to remain proficient. Others spend their time on site drawing range cards, measuring everything with the reticle, and using a laser rangefinder to confirm the distances to potential targets.
I am intimately familiar with one department whose officers don't know how to Mil targets, don't have the reticles to do it with, are not issued rangefinders, and don't purchase their own. I am not looking forward to the day I get called to testify should any of its officers be involved in a shooting.