CanusLatransSnpr said:Thank you for this thread! I have often wondered what the differences were between ffp and spf scopes. However, I'm left a little confused on the same token. I am a varmint hunter, that ranges targets with a range finder, and then acquires said target in the scope, adjust elevation/windage for the shot and dispatch. I don't use reticles that have mildots/bdc because I feel they "clutter" the view in the scope! A target dot doesn't bother me much but, I prefer a fine crosshair. Am I correct that a sfp scope is better for varminting because the reticle size doesn't change with magnification changes? Also, if a rifle's poi is centered on the crosshairs does the poi change with magnification changes? These two questions are what have me confused! Thanks in advance for the clarification!
Mike
A varmint hunter shoot on very small targets so a SFP would be better because the reticle is much finer.
Thats the big disadvantage at FFP scopes - most reticles are too thick.
Some IOR FFP scopes have a 0,1mil center dot and thicker outher reticle lines, thats the best solution for FFP scopes when shooting on small sized targets. But with a conventional reticle in a FFP scope it`s realy very hard to aim because the reticle cover too much.
Both systems have advantages and disadvantages. That`s live. Nothing is perfekt.
Some decades ago, most scopes in europe were FFP. And very popular was the reticle # 1. Some like it - some don`t. But it`s a nice solution when a FFP is prefered and small targets must be aimed.