Worker,
I have to disagree with Ray. The better F-Class shooters can tell the difference in a 1/8th moa click at 1,000. If you watch the group as it starts to develop a 1k and it is a bit high I might not want to come down a full ¼, but I will come down an 1/8 almost without thought. A group may drift a bit as it develops during a 20 shot string, and you have to be able to make minuscule changes as the condition of the wind, mirage and the rifle change throughout the string. You can’t just say my zero is XX and expect it to finish at the same setting. If the conditions change you have to change with it. The wind and the mirage and the barrel heat will affect the impact of your ammo.
I have used both the NSX and BR models for F-Class for a number of years. I sold my last NSX just after the new F-Class targets came out. A major advantage of 1/8 minute clicks comes into play when you are off zero just enough to have to hold off for elevation to put one in the X-ring. I had to do this for an entire string at 300 one day during an SOA match using a 1/4 minute NSX. If I would have clicked down a ¼ moa it would have moved me from the top of the x-ring to the bottom. I could not center my group by clicking and had to hold off. The same thing applies at 1,000. I normally don’t click for wind, but hold off.
Buy the scope you are going to need inthe future, not the one you can get now.
Larry B.