Concerning the Tree reticles.
Sometimes one might not have time to dial a shooting solution for one distance, like when hunting.
Now expand that scenario x10 - if there are 10 distances then dialing scope turrets 10 times within a stringent time limit can be stressful and a hinderance if one wants to engage all the targets to finish a stage.
I might be one of the earliest competitors using tree reticles to successfully compete and win long range series championships with mag fed centerfire precision rifles using holdovers and holdoffs almost exclusively for a few years.
I used Horus Tree reticles, primarily the H59.
This is what I found out 1st hand while doing so. While the others were taking their eyes out the scope's sight picture to dial for all 9 of the 10 steel(first steel was already dialed for), I was using that time to locate the next steel target and assess what the wind was doing, and maybe as important as those was taking the extra time I had to build a steadier position.
Three reasons right there which helped me win two seasons at the AZPRC series/2011 and 2012.
Everyone else seemed more rushed because they dialed for all the steel.
Furthermore I experimented with dialing here and there at times in this series and found zero advantage vs using holds as far as hitting what I aimed at. Much of the misses I had were due to not guessing the wind right.
Also I learned that the .2 mil holds in my reticle was superior to half mil holds on smaller targets and easier to make a better measurement of POI to POA for a correction.
Hundreds of Precision Rifleman in NRL, PRS, and other similar shooting sports would agree with me because this is common practice now.
Yeah if you have ample time dialing is fine or even preferred. I dial more than I hold these days but I'm not under the time limits I was back then.
Steve,
I appreciate your balanced view.

It's not one or the other. It's the "It depends" approach.

To me it seems that using holdoffs requires more practice than dialing to achive the same precision — especially when offhand shooting where the reticle dances around the target.
But holdoffs clearly are quicker.
Dialing is a set and go approach — whereas using holdoffs requires the brain to maintain the exact elevation and windage in active memory — while at the same time dealing with buckfever, competition stress, etc. Again, a training issue.
I also realize that with today's powerful PCP's our typical point blank range (PBR) has increased drastically from shooting springers (and the sub-12FPE guns of our UK brethren, and the sub-6FPE guns of our regulation-oppressed German brethren).
➠ This means, that neither holdoffs nor dialing are as often needed for hunting as they used to be.
➧ We live in the Golden Age of Scopes & Airguns:
300-dollars scopes with a full set of features and consistent turrets.
A reticle for every shooting style.
A gun for every shooting scenario and aesthetic reference.
What a great time to be an airgunner!

Matthias
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