I’m continually surprised at the low quality of the Crosman webpage. They don’t explain their products well. They misname and mislabel them. And the customer needs to go to other sellers and online stores to find out the info they need – does Crosman feel they need to dumb down the information they present?
I was just looking at this scope yesterday, and wanted to put it on my scope list of specs for 2-12x scopes. But I didn’t. Here’s why.
First of all, they put caps on the turrets – which for me is the manufacturer’s way of saying: “Shooter, zero this scope, and then leave the turrets alone. They don’t withstand frequent adjustments!”
Beside, they made this a FFP scope – and FFP only really makes sense
if I shoot with holdovers instead of simply clicking the turrets.
But for holdovers
I need a reticle with some kind of dots or hash marks that allows me to make adjustments for windage and elevation.
This scope has those markings, but the most important ones –
the vertical ones below the X for elevation holdovers are not EVENLY SPACED! Cf. pic, and the three red arrows – the arrows are all the same length....
This reticle is, I just learned, called a BDC, a
bullet
drop
compensating reticle. And for PB shooters a BDC is calibrated to a common standard cartridge – that has a certain standard muzzle velocity and projectile weight and BC.
If Crosman doesn’t even tell us in their product manual(!) what cartridge the reticle is calibrated for –
than this has got to be the biggest scope joke in a while...! 
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As our
airguns do not have standard muzzle velocities, standard projectile weights, or standard BC, this reticle is NONSENSE for airgunners who want to use hold over and benefit from the FFP. Because we need mil dots or moa hash marks that are
evenly spaced out for making our holdovers.
And the scope is nonsense for airgunners who want to revert to clicking the turrets, as Crosman decided to put turret caps on the scope – with the clear message: “Turrets NOT suitable for daily use!”
So, if you already have this scope, here’s one “work around” this nonsense: Using your gun’s favorite pellet, zero the gun with the scope at a range suitable to your typical shooting distances.
Now shoot that pellet at target cards (o pieces of paper with a dot) beyond your far zero distance – spaced out every 5 yards. Aim the cross-hairs always at the bull’s eye.
After shooting a group, check if the group center coincides with one of the three horizontal hash lines below the cross-hairs. If they do, then you know that
for that pellet, at that distance, that horizontal hash mark is your holdover. The same can be done for the range up to your near zero.
Have fun. Or sell it!
Matthias