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<blockquote data-quote="IAHNTR" data-source="post: 1093276" data-attributes="member: 76649"><p>The parallax knob is more like focusing a pair of binoculars. The parallax has absolutely no correlation to where the bullet is going to go or where the crosshairs are, they are two totally separate mechanisms. </p><p></p><p>The "100" on the parallax knob is going to focus the target through the scope at roughly 100 yds. Moving the knob to "200" will give you a clearer image at roughly 200 yds. </p><p></p><p>Again, the parallax adjustment has nothing to do with bullet trajectory.</p><p></p><p>Hopefully this answered your question some, if I understood it correctly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="IAHNTR, post: 1093276, member: 76649"] The parallax knob is more like focusing a pair of binoculars. The parallax has absolutely no correlation to where the bullet is going to go or where the crosshairs are, they are two totally separate mechanisms. The "100" on the parallax knob is going to focus the target through the scope at roughly 100 yds. Moving the knob to "200" will give you a clearer image at roughly 200 yds. Again, the parallax adjustment has nothing to do with bullet trajectory. Hopefully this answered your question some, if I understood it correctly. [/QUOTE]
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