MOA P4F reticle in a SFP S&B 12-50???

Gunneegoogoo

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Does anyone have one of these?? I do (1/8 MOA clicks), and for the life of me I couldn't find a subtension diagram, so I made one.

I contacted S&B about 3 weeks ago with no response, and I put another email out yesterday - so we'll see.

I think it's right. I made it by zooming into 50x at 100yds, and scaling the markings off the 1" boxes on a standard target sheet.

Let me know if you have any thoughts, or if you have one too and you want me to change it. I made it in .ppt, and you're welcome to it if it'd help you with a trajectory card for holdovers.

-Jer.

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The issues your having is the exact reason why I went with a 5-25 mil/mil scope, instead of the instock 12-50, 1/8perclick/sfp. I didn't want to have to mess around with sfp or moa/mil reticle. Glad I made that decision, otherwise I'd be lost.
 
I was just wondering if any of you knew what the subtensions were - and if they're in MOA or MIL

I did hear back from S&B USA today. All they have from Germany is one from the 5-25 PMII-2 SFP, and it seems they expect those of us with this 4000$ optic to just work around it.

It does look like this is a MIL reticle from what S&B has sent me. However, what S&B has sent me also shows that the FOV on the reticle changes with power - which it certainly shouldn't with a SFP scope.

-J.

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Subtension is for this scope 1/8 MOA ( .125 ) of an inch thick in the thiness part of the reticle at 50X...

The 1/4 cm click is the one in mil, for this one, value of the thiness line of the reticle is .1 mill all the way to 50X since it is a FFP... JP.
 
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Thx Guys!!

Caramel, what part of the reticle is .125MOA???

-J.

The thiness line in your reticle is .125 tho. or 1/8 MOA at 50X at 100 yards... JP.
Correction... Not at 12.5 but at 50X the value of 1/8 apply... I did it backward, i just looked in my scope and did it right...
 
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However, what S&B has sent me also shows that the FOV on the reticle changes with power - which it certainly shouldn't with a SFP scope.

What do you mean "the FOV on the reticle"? The field of view of what you see always changes when you change magnification. And the reticle subtensions only stay the same for first focal plane (FFP) scopes.
 
The S&B 12-50 is available in first or second focal plane. The reticle is the same for both types, with the same subtensions.
 
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