Wellll.... I guess I'll show you some more Crazy Dan Stuff...LOL.
I found out on my last trip out West that i wanted to be able to turn my turrets quicker for the range that the rangefinder gave me with a little more precision than trying to convert yardage to moa in a hurry. I wanted to know what yardage was at each moa click.
Viper HS LR 6-24x50 FFP XLR (MOA) Reticle
I have this same scope on both rifles, but they have 1/2" MOA clicks, which is more than I really wanted, but I found a way to make them work better for me.
I went to Vortex's Ballistic Program, which is Great, and easy for me to work with. After installing my ballistic stuff, with a 300 yd zero, I then had it show me the yardage in 1 yd increments... not the normal 50 or 100 yds stuff. Only 1 yd increments out to 1000 yds. The chart showed exactly what yardage was aligned with each click. I went down the chart and copied and pasted each yardage with it's click number, on a document page, which I later printed off.
I know your probably confused by now...LOL.
This is my cheat sheet that I made up for my 20-250.
The yellow numbers on the left are the yardage... then the click number... then the amount of bullet rise or fall between the two clicks... then the number of wind drift in inches at 10 mph at 3 oclock...then the amount of 1/4 moa turret clicks (windage turrets are 1/4, not 1/2).
Example...
500 yds = just happened to fall dead on click #7. That wind speed and direction would result in a 16" drift, which you can use Kentucky Windage or turn windage turret over 12 clicks = 3 moa.
Now if the coyote is at 511 yds, then I would have to decide if I wanted to use drop clks #7 or #8. The number in the white is the amount of inches of drop there is between those two clks, which is 4" at that yardage. I can use #7 and know that the bullet will drop 2", or use #8 and let it rise up 2". Either way, it should spill blood.
I then went to Custom Turret Label.Com, and designed a custom label that would number each turret click. These scopes have 24 moa turrets, so i needed 48 clks numbered. Had to use two lines to make it happen.
You get 4 labels for 25.00, and I could use two labels on both rifle scopes.
I tested this system out last week when I was sighting in my new scope for the 20 cal, and it worked like a Champ. I only tried it out to 550 yds, but it nailed the 6" log lying out there.
Now all I have to do is range the critter... find the click # on my sheet... dial and shoot...while at the same time, I'll know in my mind the amount of gap in inches for rise or fall... and it will help if the critter moves closer or further away from me while trying to get off a shot.
So there you have it... Dan Brothers totally exposes himself... he is either Crazy like a Fox... or like a Nut House...LOL.