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  1. #1
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    Question hey math wizards

    Dusted off my very old army binococs. and started trying to remember what those marks on the bottom were for.Dawned on me. Something to do with range finding.I thought of the word WORM, meant something to me once[supposedly]An army thing, ya know the the unskilled, teaching the unwilling, the unnecessary

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by kygorski View Post
    Dusted off my very old army binococs. and started trying to remember what those marks on the bottom were for.Dawned on me. Something to do with range finding.I thought of the word WORM, meant something to me once[supposedly]An army thing, ya know the the unskilled, teaching the unwilling, the unnecessary
    I'm curious of what the marks mean? I never used binos in the military, well kinda I guess but mine were tied to a 60 ton tank.

  3. #3
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    They are graduated marks used to estimate the range of an object. If you know the relative size of an object. The newer models are measured in mils because the are more accurate than degrees, Thre are 17.8 mils in a degree. The further the object is the smaller the object appears. If you know the estimated size of an object (a Tank), you can bracket it between the horizontal lines on the verticle post or the verticle lines on the horizontal post to determine its distance from you. The vertical lines on the horizontal base can also be used to estimate right to left distance. If you were calling in artillery, you would use the binos to adjust fire on the target by measuring from where the first round hit and calling back to the fire direction center to move right or left, say 100 mils and up 250 mils. Then fire for effect!

  4. #4
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    Ah

    width over range in mills WORM. I was a gunner on a 106 reckless rifle. Later in a NATO excersice as punishment was a radio operator for a FO. The FO was a lt and some kind of math geek.He was explainig about artiley fire, and barrage points, if it wasn,t so cold and wet might have learned something.

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