I'm just going to throw this out there for the sake of getting a discussion started (God knows that'll be a first

) Still and all, here it is. LEARN TO ESTIMATE RANGE! You have bought a very nice rifle and presumably will put a good piece of glass on it. I assume you know how to use mil dots (me I'm still learning

). As a USMC sniper said, we like to operate without batteries. I'm not saying range finders are a fred ("F"ing Ridiclous Electronic Device), but I have seen it taken to absurds. I live about 40 yards (estimated

) from the 14th green on a golf course. There are guys who know precicely because their balls land right outside my yard (or inside it) to avoid a big honking bunker. They then get out of their carts and use range finders on the pin to figure out whether to use a #9 or a wedge.

Anyone wondering why I keep all balls hit into my yard, and give them in a bottle bag as a Christmas gift to a friend (usually about 200) has their question answered right there. Like wise there are the close range, range finders for bow hunting. Nikon, did or does make one. Again

. If you can't tell the difference between 20 yards and 40, maybe you should learn before shooting at a live target. The point (such as there is) to this is as follows. My advice? You have recognized you have a weakness in judging ranges. Good. Thats the first step to fixing it. Buy a cheap but adequate unit used on ebay. Use that in conjunction with your mil dot to learn range estimation. I bet you will get bored with the toy before long.

You'l have learned a skill as valuable as how to read a topo map, and be a better rifleman for it. But again, I just throw this out there to learn from the replies.
FQ13
PS I taught myself this skill wnen I was 16 and under the existing Fl. law could hunt without supervision. I didn't have a range finder. I did have my granddads old 1973 F-100. His advic, was to use it to measure a familar distance using the odometer and use it as a benchmark. He was a forest ranger and surveyor and purely hated anyone who gave directions without knowing how far a mile was.

That I knew before he gave me the truck. The difference between 75, 100, 150 and three hundred yards, I had drilled into my head by driving mail box to mail box in my neighborhood. It literally has become a case of "That deer is 200 yards away as its about 3/4ths of the way from my door to the VanPopperings. Not scientific, but damned if it don't work.

I'm still working on mil dot theory and will buy one on my next new scope.