I noticed Leupold has some larger reticle dot sizes, 1/4 or 1/3min. Any comments about larger dots for 50 & 100 yd smallbore prone?
Thanks
Dot Size for Prone Scope
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963, David Levene, Spencer
Hi there 'ring,
When folks talk about the minutes of a scope dot they are talking about minutes of angle. 1 degree of angle = 60 minutes of angle.
Now, since the lines that form the angle get further apart the further you get from the point of the angle, 1 minute of angle will cover a larger distance at 100 yards than it will at 50 yards. (The point of the angle is kind of assumed to start at the scope)
Now, sparing a further trig lesson crunching the numbers 1 minute of angle = 1.0472" at 100 yards, 0.5236" at 50 yards and if you really care 0.5726" at 50m. For what we are doing here, call it 1 inch at 100 yds and 0.5 inch at the midrange distances.
So a scope with a 1/4 minute dot will cover about 1/8" at 50 yards, this means if you have a really good hold the dot will remain inside a bullet hole. The same dot will cover 1/4" at 100 yards or pretty much just cover the bullet hole.
As for the general question about dot preference, years ago, late 1970s there was a strong preference for 1/4 and 3/8 minute dots so you could easily hold on a bullet hole at 50 yards. I don't really shoot scope anymore except for tuning exercises so I don't know what the current line of thinking is.
Cheers,
'Dude
When folks talk about the minutes of a scope dot they are talking about minutes of angle. 1 degree of angle = 60 minutes of angle.
Now, since the lines that form the angle get further apart the further you get from the point of the angle, 1 minute of angle will cover a larger distance at 100 yards than it will at 50 yards. (The point of the angle is kind of assumed to start at the scope)
Now, sparing a further trig lesson crunching the numbers 1 minute of angle = 1.0472" at 100 yards, 0.5236" at 50 yards and if you really care 0.5726" at 50m. For what we are doing here, call it 1 inch at 100 yds and 0.5 inch at the midrange distances.
So a scope with a 1/4 minute dot will cover about 1/8" at 50 yards, this means if you have a really good hold the dot will remain inside a bullet hole. The same dot will cover 1/4" at 100 yards or pretty much just cover the bullet hole.
As for the general question about dot preference, years ago, late 1970s there was a strong preference for 1/4 and 3/8 minute dots so you could easily hold on a bullet hole at 50 yards. I don't really shoot scope anymore except for tuning exercises so I don't know what the current line of thinking is.
Cheers,
'Dude
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