After about 20K hours driving aircraft, I've come to believe -- firmly -- the old adage: "There are two kinds of pilots flying retractable gear...those who HAVE landed gear up and those who haven't...YET!"
Same applies to 1/8 moa click scopes. If you have one, the odds are that, sooner or later, you're going to wind up a rev off.
(As far as any accuracy advantage accruing to 1/8 moa clicks, the MOST error you can have with 1/4 moa adjustments -- IF your poi falls directly in the center of a click space -- is 1/8 moa. NOBODY holds 1/8 moa offhand.)
All that said, there are good scopes out there with only 1/8 moa adjustments and many of us are using them. If you're among us, it's easy to fix the problem:
Make -- or have made -- a 'collar' (spacer) out of Delrin, aluminum, whatever, that fits over the adjustment turret cylinder and 'stops' the dial just below minimum zero. (It's just a screw. As you turn it to lower elevation, it moves 'into' the housing.) Careful measurement will give you the depth needed for this spacer. With a Bushnell, it can usually be done with an appropriately thick washer -- you just have to drill the hole out. Whenever you're not absolutely certain where you are on the dial -- or if you've left the rifle on line where some kind soul might have reset your adjustments for you (which isn't common but does happen) -- you just spin it down to the 'stop' and come back up. Works perfectly and, if you're careful with the sizing and wind up 'stopping' just a minute or so below chicken setting, you don't even have to look at the dial to reset. If you're really a 'belt and suspenders' type, you can do the same with windage...with the understanding that you need enough clearance to go left at least a few minutes!
BTW,
The info given by Bushnell to eeleater sounds wrong to me. The SIZE of a dot will not change in a 2nd focal plane scope -- which is all AFAIK that Bushnell offers -- but the 'subtension' (moa coverage of any one dot/spacing for multiple dots, etc) WILL change. Only in 1st focal plane scopes does the relationship of the reticle and the image remain the same. Premier has done 1st focal plane conversions in the past. Whether they are doing them now, I don't know.