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  2. Telescopic sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telescopic_sight

    Some Leupold hunting sights with duplex reticles allow range estimation to a White-tailed deer buck by adjusting magnification until the area between the backbone and the brisket fits between the crosshairs and the top thick post of the reticle. Once that is done, the range be read from the scale printed on the magnification adjustment ring.

  3. Leupold & Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leupold_&_Stevens

    [3] [4] In 1962, Leupold invented the Duplex Reticle, which most riflescopes now use. [6] By 1979, Leupold scopes were generating twice the total revenue of Stevens instruments. [3] [7] In 1969, the company acquired a majority interest in the company Nosler Bullets (also a family company), and then sold off their portion in 1988.

  4. C79 optical sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C79_optical_sight

    C79 Reticle as shown in the declassified danish manual of arms HRN 111-00 for the M95 family of rifles (C7,C8 and C8IUR) The reticle of the C79 sight was designed to serve on the C9 Light Machine Gun, thus an appropriate pattern was chosen to aid the gunner in judging distance.

  5. Stadiametric rangefinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stadiametric_rangefinding

    Targeting reticle of the M67 recoilless rifle, correctly ranging a tank at 275 m range. Antitank weapons of the 1940–70s used stadiametric range estimation based on the average sizes of armoured fighting vehicles. The stadia method is based upon the principle of similar triangles.

  6. M24 sniper weapon system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M24_Sniper_Weapon_System

    The "long action" allows the rifle to be re-configured for dimensionally larger cartridges up to 3.340 inches (84.84 mm) in overall length. The M24 originally came tapped for the Leupold Ultra M3A 10×42mm fixed-power scope, which came with a circle-shaped mil-dot glass-etched reticle.

  7. Milliradian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milliradian

    If a rifle scope has mrad markings in the reticle (or there is a spotting scope with an mrad reticle available), the reticle can be used to measure how many mrads to correct a shot even without knowing the shooting distance. For instance, assuming a precise shot fired by an experienced shooter missed the target by 0.8 mrad as seen through an ...

  8. Reflector sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflector_sight

    The reticle itself is too close to the eye to be in focus but the curved mirror presents the viewer with an image of the reticle at infinity. This type was invented by Dutch optical engineer Lieuwe van Albada in 1932, [ 5 ] originally as a camera viewfinder, and was also used as a gunsight on World War II bazookas : the US M9 and M9A1 "Bazooka ...

  9. Mk 12 Special Purpose Rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mk_12_Special_Purpose_Rifle

    Due to the relative modularity of the system, optics (as well as almost everything else) can be mounted according to the operator's wishes. However, SPRs are most often seen with a 3.5–10×40 mm Leupold LR M3 (SPR/A), a 2.5–8×36 mm TS-30 (SPR/B), or a 3–9×36 mm TS-30 A2 (Mk 12 MOD 0/1) Mid Range/Tactical Illuminated Reticle Dayscope.