Telescopic sights come with a variety of different
reticles, ranging from the simple
crosshairs to complex reticles designed to allow the shooter to
range a target, to compensate for the bullet drop, and to adjust
windage required due to crosswinds. A user can estimate the range to objects of known size, the size of objects at known distances, and even roughly compensate for both bullet drop and wind drifts at known ranges with a reticle-equipped sight. For example, with a typical
Leupold brand 16
minute of angle (MOA) duplex reticle (similar to image B) on a fixed-power telescopic sight, the distance from post to post, between the heavier lines of the reticle spanning the center of the sight picture, is approximately at , or, equivalently, approximately from the center to any post at 200 yards. If a target of a known diameter of 16 inches fills just half of the total post-to-post distance (i.e. filling from sight center to post), then the distance to target is approximately . With a target of a diameter of 16 inches that fills the entire sight picture from post to post, the range is approximately 100 yards. Other ranges can be similarly estimated accurately in an analog fashion for known target sizes through proportionality calculations. Holdover, for estimating vertical point of aim offset required for bullet drop compensation on level terrain, and horizontal windage offset, for estimating side to side point of aim offsets required for wind effect corrections, can similarly be compensated for through using approximations based on the wind speed, from observing flags or other objects, by a trained user through using the reticle marks. The less-commonly used holdunder, used for shooting on sloping terrain, can even be estimated by an appropriately-skilled user with a reticle-equipped sight, once both the slope of the terrain and the slant range to target are known. There are two main types of reticle constructions:
wire reticle and
etched reticle. Wire reticles are the oldest type of reticles and are made out of metal wire or thread, mounted in an optically appropriate position in the telescopic sight's tube. Etched reticles are an optic element, often a glass plate, with inked patterns
etched onto it, and are mounted as an integrated part of the
lightpath. When backlit through the ocular, a wire reticle will reflect incoming light and cannot present a fully opaque (black) reticle with high contrast. An etched reticle will stay fully opaque (black) if backlit.
Patterns Reticle patterns can be as simple as a round dot,
small cross,
diamond,
chevron and/or
circle in the center (in some prism sights and
reflex/
holographic sights), or a pointed
vertical bar in a "
T"-like pattern (such as the famous "German #1" reticle used on the
Wehrmacht ZF41 sights during the
Second World War, or the
SVD-pattern reticle used on the
Soviet PSO-1 sights during the
Cold War) that essentially imitates the front post on
iron sights. However, most reticles have both horizontal and vertical lines to provide better visual references.
Crosshairs The
crosshair is the most rudimentary reticle, represented as a pair of smooth,
perpendicularly intersecting lines in the shape of a "
+", and the crosshair center is used for aiming the weapon. The crosshair lines geometrically resemble the
X- and Y-axis of the
Cartesian coordinate system, which the shooter can use as a simple reference for rough horizontal and vertical calibrations. Crosshair reticles typically do not have any
graduated markings, and thus are unsuitable for
stadiametric rangefinding. However some crosshair designs have thickened outer sections that help with aiming in poor
contrast situations when the fine crosshair center cannot be seen clearly. These "thin-thick" crosshair reticles, known as
duplex reticles, can also be used for some rough estimations if the transition point between thinner and thicker lines are at a defined distance from the center, as seen in designs such as the common 30/30 reticles (both the fine horizontal and vertical crosshair lines are 30
MOAs in length at 4× magnification before transition to thicker lines). There can be additional features such as enlarged center dot (frequently also
illuminated),
concentric circle (solid or broken/dashed),
chevron,
stadia bars, or a combination of the above, that are added to a crosshair to help with easier aiming.
Milling reticles Many modern reticles are designed for
(stadiametric) rangefinding purposes. Perhaps the most popular and well-known ranging reticle is the
mil-dot reticle, which consists of a duplex
crosshair with small dots marking each
milliradian (or
mil) intervals from the center. An alternative variant uses perpendicular
hash lines instead of dots, and is known as the
mil-hash reticle. Such
graduated reticles, along with those with
MOA-based increments, are collectively and unofficially called "
milling reticles", and have gained significant acceptance in
NATO and other military and law enforcement organizations. Mil-based reticles, being
decimal in graduations, are by far more prevalent due to the ease and reliability of ranging calculations with the ubiquitous
metric units, as each milliradian at each meter of distance simply corresponds to a
subtension of 1 millimeter; while MOA-based reticles are more popular in civilian usage favoring
imperial units (e.g. in the United States), because by coincidence 1 MOA at 100 yards (the most common
sight-in distance) can be
confidently rounded to 1 inch. To allow methodological uniformity, accurate
mental calculation and efficient communication between spotters and shooters in
sniper teams, mil-based sights are typically matched by elevation/windage adjustments in 0.1 mil increments. There are however military and
shooting sport sights that use coarser or finer reticle increments. By means of a
mathematical formula "[Target size] ÷ [Number of mil intervals] × 1000 = Distance", the user can easily calculate the distance to a target, as a 1-meter object is going to be exactly 1 milliradian at a 1000-meter distance. For example, if the user sees an object known to be 1.8 meters tall as something 3 mils tall through the telescopic sight, the distance to that object will be 600 meters (1.8 ÷ 3 × 1000 = 600).
Holdover reticles Some milling reticles have additional marking patterns in the bottom two
quadrants, consisting of elaborate arrays of neatly spaced fine dots,
"+" marks or hashed lines (usually at 0.2
mil or ½
MOA intervals), to provide accurate references for compensating
bullet drops and
wind drifts by simply aiming
above (i.e., hold the aim over the target) and
upwind of the target (i.e.,
deflection shooting, or
Kentucky windage). This type of reticles, designed to hold the aim high and away from the target, are therefore called
holdover reticles. Such aiming technique can quickly correct for ballistic deviations without needing to manually readjust the sight's zero, thus enabling the shooter to place rapid, reliably calibrated follow-up shots. When
shooting at extended distances, the farther the target, the greater the bullet drops and wind drifts that need to be compensated. Because of this, the reference arrays of holdover reticles are typically much wider at the lower portion, shaping into an
isosceles triangle/
trapezium that resembles the
canopy of a
spruce, the
ornamental tree traditionally used to make
Christmas trees. Holdover reticles therefore are colloquially also known as "
Christmas tree reticles". Well-known examples of these reticles include GAP G2DMR, Horus TReMoR series and H58/H59,
Vortex EBR-2B and Kahles AMR.
Reticle focal plane Telescopic sights based on image erector lenses (used to present to the user with an upright image) have two planes of focus where a reticle can be placed: at the focal plane between the
objective and the image erector lens system (the First Focal Plane (FFP)), or the focal plane between the image erector lens system and the
eyepiece (the Second Focal Plane (SFP)). On fixed power telescopic sights there is no significant difference, but on variable power telescopic sights a first focal plane reticle expands and shrinks along with the rest of the image as the magnification is adjusted, while a second focal plane reticle would appear the same size and shape to the user as the target image grows and shrinks. In general, the majority of modern variable-power sights are SFP unless stated otherwise. The main disadvantage of SFP designs comes with the use of range-finding reticles such as mil-dot. Since the proportion between the reticle and the target is dependent on selected magnification, such reticles only work properly at one magnification level, typically the highest power. Some long-range shooters and military snipers use fixed-power telescopic sights to eliminate this potential for error. Some SFP sights take advantage of this aspect by having the shooter adjust magnification until the target fits a certain way inside the reticle and then extrapolate the range based on the power adjustment. Some Leupold hunting sights with duplex reticles allow range estimation to a
White-tailed deer buck by adjusting magnification until the area between the backbone and the brisket fits between the crosshairs and the top thick post of the reticle. Once that is done, the range be read from the scale printed on the magnification adjustment ring. Although FFP designs are not susceptible to magnification-induced errors, they have their own disadvantages. It's challenging to design a reticle that is visible through the entire range of magnification: a reticle that looks fine and crisp at 24× magnification may be very difficult to see at 6×. On the other hand, a reticle that is easy to see at 6× may be too thick at 24× to make precision shots. Shooting in low light conditions also tends to require either illumination or a bold reticle, along with lower magnification to maximize light gathering. In practice, these issues tend to significantly reduce the available magnification range on FFP sights compared to SFP, and FFP sights are much more expensive compared to SFP models of similar quality. Most high-end optics manufacturers leave the choice between a FFP or SFP mounted reticle to the customer or have sight product models with both setups. Variable-power telescopic sights with FFP reticles have no problems with point of impact shifts. Variable-power telescopic sights with SFP reticles can have slight point-of-impact shifts through their magnification range, caused by the positioning of the reticle in the mechanical zoom mechanism in the rear part of the telescopic sight. Normally these impact shifts are insignificant, but accuracy-oriented users, who wish to use their telescopic sight trouble-free at several magnification levels, often opt for FFP reticles.
Reticle illumination Either type of reticle can be illuminated for use in low-light or daytime conditions. With any illuminated low-light reticle, it is essential that its brightness can be adjusted. A reticle that is too bright will cause glare in the operator's eye, interfering with their ability to see in low-light conditions. This is because the pupil of the human eye closes quickly upon receiving any source of light. Most illuminated reticles provide adjustable brightness settings to adjust the reticle precisely to the ambient light. Illumination is usually provided by a
battery-powered
LED, though other electric light sources can be used. The light is projected forward through the sight, and reflects off the back surface of the reticle. Red is the most common colour used, as it least impedes the shooter's
natural night vision. This illumination method can be used to provide both daytime and low-light conditions reticle illumination.
Radioactive isotopes such as
tritium can also be used as a light source to provide an illuminated reticle for low-light condition aiming. In sights such as the
SUSAT or
Elcan C79 Optical Sight tritium-illuminated reticles are used. The
Trijicon Corporation, famous for their
ACOG prism sights that are adopted by various
assault infantry branches of the
United States military, uses tritium in their combat and hunting-grade firearm optics. The tritium light source has to be replaced every 8–12 years, since it gradually loses brightness due to
radioactive decay. With
fiber optics, ambient can be collected and directed to an illuminated daytime reticle. Fiber-optics reticles automatically interact with the ambient light level that dictates the brightness of the reticle.
Trijicon uses fiber optics combined with other low-light conditions illumination methods in their AccuPoint telescopic sights and some of their ACOG sights models. ==Additional features==