Pawpaw wrote:johncanfield wrote:Roger on the magnifier, noticed they are available. I guess I'm still not making my dilemma clear. What I think I know so far is:
The red dot is like any other shooting optic
If you sight it in at what ever distance, the bullet will obey the trajectory table
There is no magic in the red dot optic that compensates for drop
The question remains how do most people use their red dot scope? Sight it in at 50 yards and call it good enough for anything between 25-100 yards since there is no reticle and you can't calculate holdovers?
Exactly. A red dot scope is a SPEED sight, not a PRECISION sight. The dot itself is the first clue. Your dot is most likely 3 or 4 MOA, possibly larger. You're not going to be able to use it to shoot sub-MOA groups at any range.
+1
I just took delivery on a new Aimpoint T2 Micro with a 2 MOA dot a week ago. Even with a small dot like that,
and assuming I can even see the target at that distance, that means that dot covers a 2" circle at 100 yards......a 4" circle at 200 yards.....and a 6" circle at 300 yards. With a 4 MOA dot, double those circle sizes at each distance. These are not "precision" sights. However, if your sight is zeroed for the right distance, they become a true point and click interface. A 50 yard zero for a red dot sight with no bullet drop compensating reticle (or at least, no
appreciable bullet drop compensating reticle) is about perfect for a shooter of average skills out to 300 yards. Eagle eyes can do even better. I can't any longer. My eyes require magnification to shoot anymore. But I'm pretty sure I could hit a man-sized target at 200 with a red dot, and further than that with a magnifier lined up behind it. That said, you'll never shoot dime sized groups with an RDS.
........and BTW, if your AR15 shoots 2 MOA groups, and your sight has a 4 MOA dot, you can't even see the bullet strikes at the zero range. 2 MOA at 50 yards is a 1" group, which would be totally obscured by the 2" area covered at 50 yards by a 4 MOA dot.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT