Re: Mil-Dot
I think a lot of it comes down to speed.
If your spotter has a spotting scope with a mil reticle, he can use this easily communicate information back to you, and you can disect this information easily with a FFP scope.
Another advantage of the FFP mil dot reticle is that you dont have any error occuring from reading height in mil that might be occured from the actual scope itself... to explain that, say my Nightforce needs to be on 22x to be able to range using mil dot / MLR reticle... how can I be certain that my scope is truly on 22x when the lines on the scope body and zoom ring meet? I cant and this can vary from scope to scope, so unless I manually check this I cannot be certain.
And for the record my scope moves a tinny bit past the 22x line.