Parallax Wheel

Racer88 asked a rational Q. The FT competitions ban rangefinders so we do whatever is necessary to cheat. We turn our scopes into rangefinders.....

Bigger wheels, more resolution of distance. Nautilus wheels, more resolution over a selected distance.

We humans are innovative, rules, we don't need no stinkin rules!
 
Perfect explanation. Thanks. I will not likely ever attend any competitions. I've tried a few (along with my daughter) in the PB world and did NOT like the vibe. A bunch of jerks, really. Old farts (and I'm close to being an "old fart" myself) obsessed with rules and zero desire to help newbies. I'll just leave it at that. No competitions for me. I'll just "compete" against myself and enjoy shooting just for the relaxation benefits of shooting.
I've been to a couple of events here in MA as a spectator. The people are wonderful and inviting to their world of fun. Ranging with parallax is very interesting and when I get some real free time (retire) I hope to learn this skill.
 
Perfect explanation. Thanks. I will not likely ever attend any competitions. I've tried a few (along with my daughter) in the PB world and did NOT like the vibe. A bunch of jerks, really. Old farts (and I'm close to being an "old fart" myself) obsessed with rules and zero desire to help newbies. I'll just leave it at that. No competitions for me. I'll just "compete" against myself and enjoy shooting just for the relaxation benefits of shooting.
I've never run into any FT peeps who had no desire to help the newbies... quite the opposite. I never compete against others anyway. I only compete against myself... looking to improve my percentage of KZ hits on a course, esp a course with targets i don't know.
 
One of the coolest features about JD’s is, regardless of which model wheel and because of the hub design and how it is standardized the wheels are all indexed the same. You can use the yardage on the original to mark the newest wheel exactly without having to even look through the scope. You could try every arc of wheel he makes and be able to conclude which wheel is best for your scope. You do not need a hub for every wheel.
Set the original wheel so the pointed is at the 10 yard marking. Carefully remove it. Without moving the parallax turret, Install the new wheel and mark it 10 yards. Remove the new wheel, install the original, turn it to your next yardage (assuming it’s 11). Without moving the parallax turret, install the new wheel and mark it with that yardage. Repeat this process across your yardage spectrum and you will have a second wheel labeled with the exacts same yardage as the original. Takes all of five minutes.
 
Love it .... Indexes when taken off exactly in the same place again !!!
This on my HERAS SPR 6-24x56 Mil SFP

PS.
For Hunter class FT the MIL retical with 16x sub tension scaling is the one to use !!!

E.jpg
 
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Racer88 asked a rational Q. The FT competitions ban rangefinders so we do whatever is necessary to cheat. We turn our scopes into rangefinders.....

Bigger wheels, more resolution of distance. Nautilus wheels, more resolution over a selected distance.

We humans are innovative, rules, we don't need no stinkin rules!
Ahhh no not cheating as using the parallax feature is how we play the game
 
I've been to a couple of events here in MA as a spectator. The people are wonderful and inviting to their world of fun.

Yeah, everyone claims that THEIR competition group is nice and welcoming. Based on my admittedly limited experience... I remain skeptical. My experience left a very sour taste when it comes to shooting competitions. Too much time, work, and "politics" to be worthwhile to me.

Maybe I'll change my mind some day and give it another try. But I've got a "day job" and family. I just enjoy my range time. It's therapeutic and relaxing. I'm not interested in a shooting activity with very limited time actually shooting (but a long time standing around) and lots of rules with the male version of "Karens" watching your every move. Nope... gonna pass for now and maybe forever.

I understand a lot of people like that. :)
 
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Yeah, everyone claims that THEIR competition group is nice and welcoming. Based on my admittedly limited experience... I remain skeptical. My experience left a very sour taste when it comes to shooting competitions. Too much time, work, and "politics" to be worthwhile to me.

Maybe I'll change my mind some day and give it another try. But I've got a "day job" and family. I just enjoy my range time. It's therapeutic and relaxing. I'm not interested in a shooting activity with very limited time actually shooting (but a long time standing around) and lots of rules with the male version of "Karens" watching your every move. Nope... gonna pass for now and maybe forever.

I understand a lot of people like that. :)
I’ve learned after 68 years that the world is what you think it is. That which we project we attract more of…. An odd truth that proves itself again and again
 
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I’ve learned after 68 years that the world is what you think it is. That which we project we attract more of…. An odd truth that proves itself again and again
I hear ya. I definitely believe in the law of attraction. I also give people the benefit of the doubt first.

At my first attempt (as a complete noob) in long range rifle (NRA High Power Match), I asked the guy I got "squadded" with a question about the bullet drop at this distance. His answer, "It's your rifle, you're on your own." I don't THINK he said that. He actually said it (verbatim) and then went back to measuring his cartridges. He was a dick.

The 3rd time I went, I brought my daughter. They squad'ed us together, which we wanted, because we were sharing the rifle. But instead of putting us each into a "relay" (1st and 2nd relay)... they forced both of us into a single relay. So instead of the 20 minutes a shooter gets in his / her relay, we had to split it, into 10 minutes each. In hindsight, I should have just bowed out and let my daughter shoot the full 20 minute relay. They were jerks about it. And it was my 16 year old daughter's first (and last) competition. She's actually a VERY good shooter, by the way, and has serious potential as a competitor.

Nope... I tried competitive shooting.... and it sucked. I'm a pretty good shooter, too. I've been in the firearms world for a very long time. I find most shooters at the range to be great people and I enjoy being around them. I like gun people! I will often offer other shooters the opportunity to fire my guns (I've got some interesting pieces). So, this is not a case of "seeing the world negatively." I'm a very positive person and happy in life. I'm also a "people person." Ask my wife! I'm the social butterfly of the family. But shooting competitions?? Multiple sequential bad experiences... specific to shooting competitions.

Sorry for the thread drift! But now I know the reason for the giant parallax wheels! ;)
 
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I hear ya. I definitely believe in the law of attraction. I also give people the benefit of the doubt first.

At my first attempt (as a complete noob) in long range rifle (NRA High Power Match), I asked the guy I got "squadded" with a question about the bullet drop at this distance. His answer, "It's your rifle, you're own your own." I don't THINK he said that. He actually said it (verbatim) and then went back to measuring his cartridges. He was a dick.

The 3rd time I went, I brought my daughter. They squad'ed us together, which we wanted, because we were sharing the rifle. But instead of putting us each into a "relay" (1st and 2nd relay)... they forced both of us into a single relay. So instead of the 20 minutes a shooter gets in his / her relay, we had to split it, into 10 minutes each. In hindsight, I should have just bowed out and let my daughter shoot the full 20 minute relay. They were jerks about it. And it was my 16 year old daughter's first (and last) competition. She's actually a VERY good shooter, by the way, and has serious potential as a competitor.

Nope... I tried competitive shooting.... and it sucked. I'm a pretty good shooter, too. I've been in the firearms world for a very long time. I find most shooters at the range to be great people and I enjoy being around them. I like gun people! I will often offer other shooters the opportunity to fire my guns (I've got some interesting pieces). So, this is not a case of "seeing the world negatively." I'm a very positive person and happy in life. I'm also a "people person." Ask my wife! I'm the social butterfly of the family. But shooting competitions?? Multiple sequential bad experiences... specific to shooting competitions.

Sorry for the thread drift! But now I know the reason for the giant parallax wheels! ;)
Man oh man - what an ugly experience! No wonder the gruff. I’ll go on record here as saying “99%” of ALL the HFT people I’ve met were the exact opposite of the experience you had - even the mental ones like me🤪
Give us a try sometime and I think you’ll be very pleased!!!
 
Why is a mildot scope preferable to MOA? What is the rationale?
In "Hunter" you must use Hold Over techniques because you are not allowed to turret twist.
The MOA reticals are not generally scaled ( As viewed ) tight enough for real precision holdover points.

In case of the HERAS SPR in Mil, the scaling is in 2/10's markings giving 5 hold spots per mil of scaling.
A typical 1/2 mil or MOA retical has 2 being full or 1/2

Most Hunter shooters do shoot Mil-dot/Rad and some Moa and it is a choice as your the one using it ultimately !!

If in WFTF or Open and turret twisting, the MOA reticle by far is the more popular
 
If you go to a competition of any sort (I have, for decades, raced MC and shot both Olympic pistol and rifle as well as Air gun and the usual NRA rifle and pistol matches). When a person is competing, they reach a point where they wear a "race face". Leave them to their thoughts. I would never dream of asking someone a "bullet drop" Q while on the line. It is your business to know that before setting up.

"Hey Ricky Racer; where is your braking point for turn two?"

Talk to people at a time when your distraction is not affecting their performance.