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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
Mill rad?
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<blockquote data-quote="QuietTexan" data-source="post: 2534238" data-attributes="member: 116181"><p>The radian is an SI derived unit, meaning it's dimensionless and is defined by the base unit used. Radians are not limited to working only with metric measurements, they're are easy to use in imperial units just the same. A mil-rad is 1/10th of anything at 100 of it. That's it. No magic, no metric, no arguments.</p><p></p><p>Want to use yards? A mil is 1/10th of a yard at 100 yards.</p><p></p><p>Want to use meters? It's 1/10th of a meter at 100 meters. </p><p></p><p>It works the same either way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="QuietTexan, post: 2534238, member: 116181"] The radian is an SI derived unit, meaning it's dimensionless and is defined by the base unit used. Radians are not limited to working only with metric measurements, they're are easy to use in imperial units just the same. A mil-rad is 1/10th of anything at 100 of it. That's it. No magic, no metric, no arguments. Want to use yards? A mil is 1/10th of a yard at 100 yards. Want to use meters? It's 1/10th of a meter at 100 meters. It works the same either way. [/QUOTE]
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Mill rad?
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