I find the March high master 40-60, the sightron sved and the valdada terminator to be some of the best at cutting mirage.What would an ideal scope make/model be for these conditions? Just out of curiosity.
Exactly - Not mirage but I have done exactly this in rainy weather on a sling target. Bull was a non distinct gray blob but the corner of the buff target face on the soggy brown cardboard was sharp enough to aim at. Knowing the full sheet target is about a 72" square I aimed at upper left corner, Came down 6 moa and right 6 moa and hit the 10 ring... clicked it into the X ring from there.So measure the target board convert to Moas left to right and top to bottom?
Do you mean 6 moa down and then 6 moa right?Exactly - Not mirage but I have done exactly this in rainy weather on a sling target. Bull was a non distinct gray blob but the corner of the buff target face on the soggy brown cardboard was sharp enough to aim at. Knowing the full sheet target is about a 72" square I aimed at upper left corner, Came down 6 moa and left 6 moa and hit the 10 ring... clicked it into the X ring from there.
LOL yes - I will fix that.Do you mean 6 moa down and then 6 moa right?
Lol I was getting worried!LOL yes - I will fix that.
I've never understood such statements. Mirage is there... it's moisture in the air and it refracts the image which causes distortion. No glass sees through the moisture from between you and the target.I find the March high master 40-60, the sightron sved and the valdada terminator to be some of the best at cutting mirage.
I don’t know why it works but it does. I’ve had scopes side by side and you can make out the lines fairly clearly in one and it’s just a black blob in the other. When there’s no mirage they both see clearly. Both scopes set to the same power as well.I've never understood such statements. Mirage is there... it's moisture in the air and it refracts the image which causes distortion. No glass sees through the moisture from between you and the target.
If you cannot see the mirage it is for one of two reasons, either the glass is of exceptionally poor quality, or the depth of field is exceedingly short... neither of which are advantageous. A short depth of field presents a superbly blurred image in heavy mirage just as bad glass does.
Good glass offers the clarity to read the mirage and the depth of field to see it well. Mirage is not your enemy, not having glass that enables you to read the mirage is the enemy.
Not to be pedantic but mirage is a result of temperature gradients (and thus density gradients) in the air through which the light is traveling from the target to the viewer. Humidity can exacerbate mirage but in and of itself is not causative. Your analogy of the light diffraction observed when viewing an underwater object from above the surface is excellent and occurs for the same reason...density changes between air and water. The same can be seen underwater at thermoclines and at interfaces between salt and fresh water when viewing under water......clip.... Mirage is there... it's moisture in the air and it refracts the image which causes distortion. No glass sees through the moisture from between you and the target. ....clip...
Denys, I was lost way before I ever responded. LOLI love it when Robin says "not to be pedantic," and then he loses himself in pedantry. So pedestrian.
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Yeah, that came across loud and clear. I look forward to seeing you at the next 1000-yard match in 2 weeks time.Denys, I was lost way before I ever responded. LOL
Sounds like you need a barrel mirage shadeLol
That’s against the rules
Also was 39 degrees a fan would have made ice
I'm not sure you are correct here.Not to be pedantic but mirage is a result of temperature gradients (and thus density gradients) in the air through which the light is traveling from the target to the viewer. Humidity can exacerbate mirage but in and of itself is not causative. Your analogy of the light diffraction observed when viewing an underwater object from above the surface is excellent and occurs for the same reason...density changes between air and water. The same can be seen underwater at thermoclines and at interfaces between salt and fresh water when viewing under water.
While I am no expert, I have been in the Mojave desert and seen mirage. So your statement that heat alone is not a cause of mirage does not seem to stand up. Although any moisture may had to this, from my observation it is not required, at least in any abundance.I'm not sure you are correct here.
My interpretation of mirage is that temperature changes cause the relative humidity in the air to change as temperature changes. That results in various refraction densities that distort and refract the image differently. We interpret this distortion as mirage.
I do not believe that in a zero moisture environment you would see mirage regardless of wind or temperature. For example, I have never seen mirage taken on a photograph from Mars where water in the air is pretty close to zero moisture.
So yes, I do believe that water vapor in the air is as you put it is causative. Heat alone is not the cause of mirage, both heat and moisture are required.
You reference similar disturbance under water at the thermo cline. I have seen this myself at around 66 feet in Lake Huron. The common elements again are heat and water. In this case the changes to the density of water is again the lens that causes the refraction.