Are the adjustments on a mrad scope the same as a moa scope?
Man this stuff is to confusing.
Not if you do everything in meters. Unless you're a math whiz or practice, converting back and forth in hunting situations without a ballistic calculator can be an exercise in frustration. For hunting I'd stick with something in MOA.Man this stuff is to confusing.
Not quite. Mrad scopes are all the rage among tactical shooters, but only because they (claim) that 'fewer clicks' of the turret it possible to more quickly set elevation. Quite frankly, MOA is more precise (1/4 moa vs 1/10 mil), and the turret must turn exactly the same degrees to reach the desired elevation. I'm not trying to shave 1/60th of a second off my time while turning the turret.so instead of times by 4 its only times by 3?
so instead of times by 4 its only times by 3?
I was never sure why this seemed to become the norm in the USA with scopes.
Are the adjustments on a mrad scope the same as a moa scope?
Same reason as the date is written backwards?I was never sure why this seemed to become the norm in the USA with scopes.
To answer the question you asked, it can be either. You can buy a mil reticle with MOA turrets, a mil reticle with mil turrets, an MOA reticle with mil turrets, or an MOA reticle with MOA turrets.
My suggestion is not to mix them unless you like to do math.
Maybe...then again in Europe you find decimal points replaced with commas in currency.Same reason as the date is written backwards?![]()