scope /click interpretation

D

dion

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Just got a bullistics program and I don't understand the moa part. Let's say at a given distance it will tell me my moa is 4.7 moa. Well my scope only has 4 grads between the hole. Numbers. How do I interpret this? Again I am new at this part.
 
MOA= Minute of Angle
Each number is 1 MOA, so if you have 4 clicks betwen the numbers then eack click is 1/4 MOA.
Now to understand what MOA is at 100 yards it is a bit over 1 inch, at 200 yards it is around 2 inchs and so forth. With that said the clicks mean diferent things at diferent yardages, 100 yards 2 click equals 1/2 inchs where at 600 yards 2 clicks will equal 1/2 MOA wich is 3 inches. (600 yards is around 6 MOA each click is a 1/4 of that MOA so one click would be 1.5 inchs.) Now that I have taken you thought the crash course of MOA, now to get to your question.

First your balistic program is just a guide, it will not be exact, there is many thing that will change, such as sunlight, mirage, wind, ETC that will affect this measurment. To figure out your question we need to know the yardage. Lets assume the yardage is 300 yards. If your come up is 4.7 MOA then you need to go 4 numbers and 3 clicks as 3 clicks would be 3/4 or .75 of an inch. (14.25 total inches or basicly a hair over 1 foot.) You may have to hold off the .005 MOA. (which is hardly anything.) Lets say your program says it is 4.6 MOA at 300 yards, then you being limited on movement would have to go either 4 numbers and 2 clicks (1/2 MOA) or got to the 3 clicks (3/4 MOA) either way you will have to hold off, for the diference. Again remember your program is not going to be spot on, if the target is a couple of feet longer or shorter than it is supose to be this can change things at longer distances, and other varibles as mentioned play into this.
 
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In the shooting game, MOA stands for minute of angle.(I believe that mathematicians prefer minute of arc. but it amounts to the same thing) As you may remember from your math classes, one way that angles are measured is in degrees, 360 making a complete circle. Each degree can be divided into 60 equal parts called minutes, and each of these minutes can be divided into 60 equal parts called seconds. Simply put, if we are talking angles, a minute is a sixtieth of a degree.

If we were to draw an angle, that was equal to one minute of angle (or for that matter any angle that was less than 180 degrees), the distance between the lines would increase as the distance from where they met increased. The gap at 200 yards would be twice that at 100, and at 300 three times, and so on.

To get an idea of how one calculates how much a minute of angle is at a distance of 100 yards, first imagine yourself at the center of a circle that has a radius of 100 yards, or 3,600 inches. First we double the 3600 inch radius to get the diameter ,7,200 inches, and then multiply that by Pi, which to two places is 3.14 which gives us the circle's circumference, 22,619.47 inches. Dividing this by 360 gives us the width (technically the length of the arc) of a degree at 100 yards of 62.83 inches. Dividing that by sixty gives us the width of one Minute OF Angle (MOA) 1.05 inches. It is common to pretend that a MOA is equal to an inch at 100 yards, twice that at 200, three times at three hundred, and so on, and in truth this slight rounding off only amounts to a half inch at 1,000 yards, an insignificant amount.

The short answer to your question in that the program is telling you to move your scope adjustment four whole numbers and three of the divisions between the numbers. This would give a change in point of impact of approximately 4.75 inches at 100 yards, 9.5 at 200, 14.25 inches at 300 and so on. By giving your adjustment in the same units as your scope adjustments, your program saves you the chore of converting inches at some distance to MOA before adjusting your scope.

If anyone reading this sees that I have screwed any of this up (while eating my asparagus, corn on the cob,and barbequed chicken), jump in with your corrections. I do not suffer from the delusion that I am anywhere near perfect. Now back to the chicken.
 
If anyone reading this sees that I have screwed any of this up (while eating my asparagus, corn on the cob,and barbequed chicken), jump in with your corrections. I do not suffer from the delusion that I am anywhere near perfect. Now back to the chicken.

No Boyd I believe your analysis is correct , in short terms 19 clicks is as close as you theoretically can come since in theory that would be 4.75 moa .

Dick
 
Just got a bullistics program and I don't understand the moa part. Let's say at a given distance it will tell me my moa is 4.7 moa. Well my scope only has 4 grads between the hole. Numbers. How do I interpret this? Again I am new at this part.

go to the range you mention with your forum nickname, and get help. They'll be glad to steer you straight.
 
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