Keep everything on the same plane for simplicity. If you have a reticle calibrated in a measurement, and knobs that match, then set your LRF to the same. Whether it is MIL, MOA, squirrel tails, fathoms, milk jugs, etc. As long as you stay consistent, then it stays simple. I think a lot of confusion is created trying to force people into thinking one is right or wrong or trying to speak half one or the other due to our individual preference. If my dope chart says the chest on an elk is .5 fathoms at 100 fathoms, and my reticle verifies this and my chart says my hold is verified to be +1 fathom of elevation, and my turrets and reticle are in fathoms, then that is what will work. I think where the consistency shows most is plotting the points that are not verified along the path of the bullet. We're not born knowing MIL or MOA or which is easier. They are arbitrary angular measurements. It is all geometry and units of measure are pretty irrelevant as long as they are consistent. Sure you can make it harder and have a Mil reticle, MOA knobs, and range in yards, but why? It would be like doing math adding fractions to decimals without trying to convert one or the other first. Maybe I'm not doing a good job of explaining it
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