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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
First Focal Plane Vs. Second Focal Plane
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<blockquote data-quote="jreagle" data-source="post: 782203" data-attributes="member: 40992"><p>Interesting thread so far.........</p><p></p><p>Orkan or anyone with FFP experience, </p><p>i have a question that has been asked before but dont believe a definite answer was posted by anyone or maybe i missed it in the 40 + pages...... </p><p></p><p>Lets say looking through a premier 3-15x50 gen2 xbr mil mil no illumination..... dialed back to low power for better FOV:</p><p>are the tick marks of the reticle visible enough for holdover in normal daylight? how about same question at twilight or dusk? </p><p>if they are not, then at what power do they become visible enough to use in daylight and low light?</p><p></p><p>This is an area of concern for me with FFP. i havent been able to borrow an FFP scope to actually field test in varying conditions.</p><p></p><p>Thanks in advance</p><p>John R</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jreagle, post: 782203, member: 40992"] Interesting thread so far......... Orkan or anyone with FFP experience, i have a question that has been asked before but dont believe a definite answer was posted by anyone or maybe i missed it in the 40 + pages...... Lets say looking through a premier 3-15x50 gen2 xbr mil mil no illumination..... dialed back to low power for better FOV: are the tick marks of the reticle visible enough for holdover in normal daylight? how about same question at twilight or dusk? if they are not, then at what power do they become visible enough to use in daylight and low light? This is an area of concern for me with FFP. i havent been able to borrow an FFP scope to actually field test in varying conditions. Thanks in advance John R [/QUOTE]
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First Focal Plane Vs. Second Focal Plane
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