I have 2 scopes one is 10X tactical mildot and the other is a 20 X tactical mildot I find that I get a lot of mirage with the 20X at over 300yrds ..What do the 1000 yrd shooters use .What would you use if you had the choice of these 2 scopes.Graham
mysticplayer said:I limit the upper end to 16X with quality optics. More is simply not needed or at least can be used under heavy mirage. I will use as much as my scopes allow when mirage is light though.
You can't hit what you can't see, so choose what works best for you from your available choices. 10X works well IF you can see and engage the target you want at the ranges you want to shoot at.
More importantly then mag is the size of the reticle. I will not use a reticle that covers my target. The dot or cross hair must be smaller. Too much aiming error otherwise.
There is no one right answer...
Jerry
Colour me in this crowd. I have only shot for a few years in this discipline, but over time bumped up the scope magnification despite mirage. I am now at 36X. Last year I was limited to 18X, and I felt under-powered. The year before...14X.If you were to survey the guys shooting 1,000 yard F class the majority would be using 16x or more.
Terry Perkins said:Colour me in this crowd. I have only shot for a few years in this discipline, but over time bumped up the scope magnification despite mirage. I am now at 36X. Last year I was limited to 18X, and I felt under-powered. The year before...14X.
With the new target dimensions (V-bull will be 0.5 MOA at 1K) in some F-class competitions, high power scopes help for target definition. Apparently some of the American F-class shooters have been holding their Nightforce scopes at 42X in heavy mirage with good success. They have learned to read conditions with this power.
Now, for long range precision shooting I prefer the 4.5X14. I like the field of view. You only need 1 MOA precision at 800 meters in order to be successful. But your wind (and mirage) reading skills must be up to the task.
Obviously my opinion differs greatly than most, but this method seems to work for me.
Terry Perkins