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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Using parallax for range estimating
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<blockquote data-quote="FearNoWind" data-source="post: 1054440" data-attributes="member: 50867"><p>If you go to the range early in the day and adjust parallax you will find that, as the light and temperature changes over the next few hours, so does the parallax. When I was shooting bench rest I found that I, and other shooters, were making periodic adjustments to parallax over the course of the match. So I wouldn't expect using parallax for range estimation to be reliable enough to serve any useful purpose.</p><p>Nightforce scopes are commonly equiped with either MOAR, MLR or Mil-Dot reticles so ranging shouldn't be that difficult.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FearNoWind, post: 1054440, member: 50867"] If you go to the range early in the day and adjust parallax you will find that, as the light and temperature changes over the next few hours, so does the parallax. When I was shooting bench rest I found that I, and other shooters, were making periodic adjustments to parallax over the course of the match. So I wouldn't expect using parallax for range estimation to be reliable enough to serve any useful purpose. Nightforce scopes are commonly equiped with either MOAR, MLR or Mil-Dot reticles so ranging shouldn't be that difficult. [/QUOTE]
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Using parallax for range estimating
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