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a mil is a mil is a mil. it is an absolute angular measurment. yards and meters have no bearing on it. if you are using a mil/mil FFP scope you just need to learn to talk the talk. a miss by .1 mil at 100 or 1000 yards/meters you make that .1 mil change and send again (assuming you did everything right the first time) K.
11,829. May 18, 2019. #8. You can do a field conversion in your head if it helps . Add 10% to meters for yards. 100 meters= 100 yards+10% or 110 yards. 1.094 is the value but the missing 0.006 is fairly negligible for most people to hold anyway. No calculator needed.
NW Colorado. Apr 5, 2020. #24. To the OP, think about it in simple terms. Zero at 100-yards or 100-meters (~109-yards), it really doesn't matter for most CF rifle cartridges as it won't make a difference. The drop at 100 +/- 9-yards is a very small insignificant amount, which is not noticable.
Re: Real World vs. Calculated trajectory for .22lr out of my mkII 10 round fps averages: sk match 1040 fps depending on environmentals, (temp. and hum., zeroed at 50 yards and using 1/8" adjustment) i'm getting a range of: 2.75"-3" drop or 29-31 clicks at 75 yards 8.25"-9" drop or 63-69 clicks at 100 yards
1 yard @ 1000 yards; 10 centimeter @ 100 meters ; 3.6 Inches @ 3600 inches or 100 yards ; Most Mil based scopes adjust in .1 Mils or 1/10th MRAD, which equals .36″ per click @ 100 yards. Some scopes also adjust in .05 Mils or .18″ @100 yards for finer adjustments.
Check your settings and make sure you have yards set vs. meters. Kestrel Ballistics said: check your settings, 1004 yds = 918 meters. App may be set to yds and Kestrel set to metric not imperial. tadawson said: 1004 meters is 1098 yards, so it sounds like your Kestrel is set to use meters instead of yards.
46. 0. 38. www.opticsplanet.com. Jan 26, 2011. #2. Re: Newbie question on fixed parallax vs. adjustable. With a scope that has a fixed parallax, say 100 yards, you can use it from 100 yards and beyond with little issue. If you try to focus at a target, say 75 yards or less, the image will may not be clear and the crosshairs can sometimes appear ...
The Santose Improved Battlesight Zero allows for an elevation setting of 50 yards/200 meters for one of the most all-around useful trajectories obtainable with the 5.56mm/223 Remington cartridge when fired from an AR-15.
I read through a few of the recommended posts on the forum for how to set the diopter. Probably the biggest help was @koshkin suggestion to set it outdoors on a target ~10-15 yards away. Making the image flat in that 15 yard range vs the 5-7 yards I could get indoors is a much better setting overall.
109.36 yards = 100 meters. 1 MIL at 100 meters = 10 centimetres = 3.94". So, if you were to draw a line exactly 10 cm in length on a target, when that line is the same length as the distance between any 2 MIL points on the reticle, that will be near enough to 100 meters.