Kind of an open ended question for you guys-
When I was starting off about a year ago, (mildot reticle, MOA knobs), my train of thought would go something like this:
1. Range estimation with mils (if UD)
2. Lookup (or recall from memory) come ups in MOA, dial it in
3. For adjusting after shot 1, guess about how many inches, click up accordingly @ that distance with relation to MOA. (Though recently I've realized estimating the amount with the reticle is probably easier, even if the measurements don't make for the easiest math)
4. For rough holdover shooting w/ reticle, would just use 1 mil ~= 3.5 MOA
It's the back and forth between inches @ target, MOA, and mils that has me a little confused. Now, before you say it, I know what the clear answer is: MATCHING RETICLES AND KNOBS
, but then I guess I'm asking more about what they train in the USAMU and the Corps. Here's the reason...
I was watching a documentary (or reading an article) on the guy who got the 1200y kill with the M24, and he mentioned that he had to aim something like "400 inches above the target". That's when I started getting confused. Here's why- that seems like real backwards math- he probably wouldn't know that at time of trigger pull, would he? Because that's a vertical measurement, not an angular one, only accurate at one distance. So did he hold over X mils, and just convert backwards for what X mils would be in inches @ 1200 y for the sake of the article? Because you don't really think about hold overs in linear, vertical distance, do you??
So for those who were trained in the armed forces, what measurements are they training you and your spotter to think in? MOA always? Vertical distance at target (inches)? Mils? Just BDC and guess work? I'm confused
I know all this goes out the window if you have a nice Mil/Mil setup, as what you see through the glass is what you get (impact distance, etc.), but I'm asking more for my own edification as plenty of you have used the standard Mil/MOA system in the thick of it, and I want to know how you categorized it in your head.
Thanks!
When I was starting off about a year ago, (mildot reticle, MOA knobs), my train of thought would go something like this:
1. Range estimation with mils (if UD)
2. Lookup (or recall from memory) come ups in MOA, dial it in
3. For adjusting after shot 1, guess about how many inches, click up accordingly @ that distance with relation to MOA. (Though recently I've realized estimating the amount with the reticle is probably easier, even if the measurements don't make for the easiest math)
4. For rough holdover shooting w/ reticle, would just use 1 mil ~= 3.5 MOA
It's the back and forth between inches @ target, MOA, and mils that has me a little confused. Now, before you say it, I know what the clear answer is: MATCHING RETICLES AND KNOBS

I was watching a documentary (or reading an article) on the guy who got the 1200y kill with the M24, and he mentioned that he had to aim something like "400 inches above the target". That's when I started getting confused. Here's why- that seems like real backwards math- he probably wouldn't know that at time of trigger pull, would he? Because that's a vertical measurement, not an angular one, only accurate at one distance. So did he hold over X mils, and just convert backwards for what X mils would be in inches @ 1200 y for the sake of the article? Because you don't really think about hold overs in linear, vertical distance, do you??
So for those who were trained in the armed forces, what measurements are they training you and your spotter to think in? MOA always? Vertical distance at target (inches)? Mils? Just BDC and guess work? I'm confused

I know all this goes out the window if you have a nice Mil/Mil setup, as what you see through the glass is what you get (impact distance, etc.), but I'm asking more for my own edification as plenty of you have used the standard Mil/MOA system in the thick of it, and I want to know how you categorized it in your head.
Thanks!