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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
Brown santa stopped by....3000bdx
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<blockquote data-quote="catorres1" data-source="post: 1611645" data-attributes="member: 80699"><p>Usually 'best' is best, but you can also set it to 'last' IIRC. </p><p></p><p>But I suspect your problem may be sensor/reticle alignment. First thing to do would be to figure out where your sensor is in relation to your reticle. Find a telephone pole and some electric power lines and use them to figure out precisely where your sensor starts and ends in the vertical and horizontal planes.</p><p></p><p>This is perhaps my main dislike...that is the sensor is not necessarily in the center of the reticle, in fact, it it may not wholly be within the reticle at all. In fairness, the majority of the RF's I have tested, Sig and otherwise, the sensor is not in the center of the reticle, but most of the time it's contained within it's boundaries. Sigs will sometimes run outside the boundary. My 3k does, but I know where it is by testing, so I'm good. </p><p></p><p>But to my mind, they (all manu's) need to be more precise here, and in the very least, I think Sig needs to look tightening up the process to make sure it is in the reticle, though to be honest, even if it is all inside the reticle but not in the center, not sure that makes much of a difference....you still need to know precisely where it is when ranging small targets at distance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="catorres1, post: 1611645, member: 80699"] Usually 'best' is best, but you can also set it to 'last' IIRC. But I suspect your problem may be sensor/reticle alignment. First thing to do would be to figure out where your sensor is in relation to your reticle. Find a telephone pole and some electric power lines and use them to figure out precisely where your sensor starts and ends in the vertical and horizontal planes. This is perhaps my main dislike...that is the sensor is not necessarily in the center of the reticle, in fact, it it may not wholly be within the reticle at all. In fairness, the majority of the RF's I have tested, Sig and otherwise, the sensor is not in the center of the reticle, but most of the time it's contained within it's boundaries. Sigs will sometimes run outside the boundary. My 3k does, but I know where it is by testing, so I'm good. But to my mind, they (all manu's) need to be more precise here, and in the very least, I think Sig needs to look tightening up the process to make sure it is in the reticle, though to be honest, even if it is all inside the reticle but not in the center, not sure that makes much of a difference....you still need to know precisely where it is when ranging small targets at distance. [/QUOTE]
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Brown santa stopped by....3000bdx
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