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  2. Rifle Scopes Yards or Meters - Sniper's Hide

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/yards-or-meters.87687

    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.

  3. 100 meters or 100 yards for zero | Sniper's Hide Forum

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/100-meters-or-100-yards-for-zero.6943362

    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.

  4. 100 yard or 100 meters | Sniper's Hide Forum

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/100-yard-or-100-meters.6995732

    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.

  5. Real World vs. Calculated trajectory for .22lr - Sniper's Hide

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/real-world-vs-calculated-trajectory-for...

    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

  6. Stop the Debate, Mils vs MOA vs IPHY - Sniper's Hide Forum

    www.snipershide.com/precision-rifle/stop-the-debate-mils-vs-moa-vs-iphy

    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.

  7. Kestrel Meters Ballistics Official Thread - Sniper's Hide

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/kestrel-meters-ballistics-official-thread...

    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.

  8. Rifle Scopes Newbie question on fixed parallax vs. adjustable

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/newbie-question-on-fixed-parallax-vs...

    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 ...

  9. Zero question for AR15 | Sniper's Hide Forum

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/zero-question-for-ar15.7015591

    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.

  10. Rifle Scopes New Primary Arms PLXC 1-8 FFP - Sniper's Hide

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/new-primary-arms-plxc-1-8-ffp.7106648/page-9

    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.

  11. Rifle Scopes - Mil Zero but Range in Yards - Sniper's Hide

    www.snipershide.com/shooting/threads/mil-zero-but-range-in-yards.7124807

    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.