I can never quite tell if you just like arguing minute points to be obtuse or if you are just convinced what you know to be true is the one truth? Guys run FFP in PRS-type stuff because the sub tensions are correct at all magnification levels. When some one says "they run the whole match at 12x" I wouldn't take them at that quite literally. I tend to run 11-13 for positional and up to maybe 16x in prone although sometimes I'll zoom in more if conditions permit or require it (tiny KYL) and sometimes I'll zoom out more if I need more field of view, etc. I imagine you can see where I'm going with this? I can also watch my trace in most positions which honestly is more of a result of practice and knowing where to look than anything else (provided you have good glass). If you're happy with your NXS at 22x, that's great but that doesn't make it ideal. There's a reason that FFP scopes are the orthodoxy in this field, as the many top shooters (who shoot 10 thousand+ rounds a year and invest copious resources to be successful) have demonstrated. It's not like they don't know about SFP optics...
I'm not trying to be obtuse. I'm trying to be open minded. I don't ever just blindly follow the leader. Guys win because of many reasons that have little to do with the scope or caliber of the rifle and more to do with a specific set of personal skills as applicable to the particular sport. F Class is more calm, deliberate and technical, PRS is more about managing confusion and cognitive over load with a side of positional management. Wind is always a factor but you cannot use a Kestrel in F Class... so wind reading needs to be internal. Even if we could use a Kestrel in F Class, the accuracy required would exceed its usefulness.
As I stated, the NSX has a significantly better depth of field than the Kahles 624. The benefit of that distinction is at the heart of my point. Its not about SFP vs FFP... exactly.
Since so many guys run at around 15x anyway, I see no disadvantage at a practical level of running SFP as long as its clear where the reticle is dimensionally correct at the power you run at anyway.
At almost 60 years old, I don't expect to win major PRS NRL style matches, but how anyone places is not a result of SFP or FFP. I agree that some guys will think so, but that's just not founded in realistic mechanical fact.
I'm not even saying that SFP is better for PRS, I'm saying that increased depth of field is better for precision shooting than scopes that have a more shallow depth of field. I have yet to find a FFP scope with a DOF that compares to the NSX. If I could find one I would advocate for it.
As for Jamie or emerson spinning turrets, well people do stupid things out there out of pure ignorance or brute stubbornness. Understanding a tool and respecting it does not include throwing all caution and common sense into the wind and misbehaving with a rifle. I've been shooting alot with target turrets that do not lock since 1980 and have never accidentally spun a turret. Even if I did, I would surely know it.
Those push pull locking turrets are more likely to get pressed by bumping something and then locked, and that will slow you down and frustrate when you don't expect it to be locked. As for the hold over hold up guys, well that speaks to my point about the lost skill of true precision shooting. This precludes all efforts to shoot better than what the shooter has loosely deemed good enough. These locking turrets are a declaration of that very point and represent a personal commitment to not even trying to do better. I can't respect that.
If guys find F Class boring, well boring for you or not, it's a place to learn how to shoot better and learn how to be more precise than you can ever learn to be in PRS NRL games. I'm not saying one is better than the other, but exposure to both will make you better at both. BTW, Nobody worth his salt uses locking turrets in F Class.
The only locking turret I could ever possibly like, would be designed to lock only at the zero position.
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