Click valuse depends upon your particular scope (type MOA or Mildot) and (2) the value of the click on an MOA scope. Some clicks on MOA scopes represent 1/4 inch at 100 yards whereas other MOA scopes have 1/8 inch click at 100 yards. So it takes either 4 clicks or 8 c;icks to change the impact of your bullet at 100 yards. One Mildot at 100 yards represents 3.6 inches. So if your scope is graduated for 1/10 mildot clicks, each click will change the bullet inpact .36 inches at 100 yards Hope that this helps
Per the manufacturer: When used at 16x the MOA Crosshair reticle can be used as your personal BDC reticle. Set up your firearm and cartridge in a ballistic calculator and you know exactly where your holdovers should be with the 2 MOA tick mark crosshair. Alternatively, use the MOA reticle pattern to size and range your target.
This Trijicon AccuPower would perform very well in that application and can definitely get you out to 600/700 yards using high quality ammo.
You will most likely want to use a 20moa picatinny rail on your rifle to ensure that you have enough elevation adjustment on your scope to hit 1000 yards. You can determine how much adjustment you will need by using a ballistics calculator with your ammo loadout entered into it.
Yes, Trijicon recoil tests all there scopes to .50BMG and higher.
If you plan on using the scope just for short range hunting you would probably be best served by the duplex reticle in the color of your choice. No need for a complicated reticle at ranges under 200 yards.
MOA is set up for range and adjustments in minutes of angle which equals about one inch (1.047) at 100 yards. Mil's are based on mil radians. One mill equals 3.6 inches at 100 yards. It is just a matter of which system of measurement you prefer. With MOA there is no need to learn a new system.
Yes it is etched and fully visible in daylight conditions.