Mildot scopes on .22 rifles
Mildot scopes are generally designed to indicate 1 yard at 1000 yards or 1 meter at 1000 meters, at 10 power. Therefore, distance between dots would be about 3.6 inches at 100 yards.
I use a mildot scope on a Savage Mark II with thumbhole stock, as does my hunting partner, for gophers. However, on two rifles I have a Traditions 3.5-10 Muzzle loading scope that has one small cross bar above the cross hairs, and two below. At about 6 power, zeroed at 60 yards, the first bar below the cross hairs is approximately 80 yards, and the second is approximately 120 yards, using Federal 36 grain HP ammo. Different ammo or scope power will give different points of impacts. Best of all, the price was $59 each, on sale, at Cabelas about a year ago.
Tasco is making a similar scope. I have one mounted on my Kimber 82 Govt. model, and it is performing satisfactory. About $90 on sale.
They work for me. I shoot 7 to 8 thousand rounds a year at gophers, and I am not hesitant to try one out to 150 yards. With the mildot scope, if you spot your miss, you can correct accordingly, and the second round generally lands on target a good percentage of times.
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