I know that reticles are very subjective to each person. I wanted to know what y’alls thought was on an ideal center dot size in a reticle and from what magnification it becomes useable. The power I am looking at would be 5-25 and out to 1200 yards.
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At what magnification can you start to use the .04 dot at?
So then smaller maybe better to zero off of. Do you prefer the .2 mil hash marks for a hold over or find the .5 to be useable enough?
I have an AMG as well. I didnt like the dot center and still would prefer a trafitional crosshair but like I said in my earlier post. I dont dial wind so the center of the reticle (dot) is basically only used to zero the rifle. After that I use the rest of the reticle like traditional crosshairs anyhow.It depends on your preferences of course but for me, it’s what YOUR eyes can see and get the job done. My eyesight has issues so the smaller dot need more magnification to see BUT this comes at the expense of a smaller FOV which can be a big disadvantage when transitioning. This has me re-thinking my AMG and the new 7C reticle on the new RZRs. YMMV
For anyone who says they can be just as precise with .5 as a .2 reticle:
Take a ruler that has only .5 and whole marks.
Lay it on a piece of paper and mark 1/10th or 2/10 marks only using the .5 and whole marks. Do this on 10 pieces of paper.
Then set a ruler down next that breaks it down in .2 or .1. See how far you are off and then do the angular math at distance.
Not saying that reticles with .5’s don’t work. But there is zero logic in that you can use one to be just as precise.
I beg to differ.
Surveyors using a (metric) level and staff will makes measurements down to a millimetre while the staff only has centimetre graduations.
The human eye can pretty accurately interpolate 1cm into 10 parts, or .5mil down to .1mil.
I did your test and was well under .1mil of error, more like .025mil of error. Take that out to 100m and you are looking at 25mm of error or 1".
So I'd suggest you can be as accurate with .5mil hashes, BUT .2mil will be a heap easier and quicker.
Now do it on the clock with and optic and be as precise.