Recently someone suggested when looking for gold rings I notch out everything, but .5cent, Alum, Pulltabs.
When he suggested I notch out everything he met all silver and clad as well. I wanted to know why
the silver and clad too. I got back what I think is a logical response from dahut:
Consider this:
Gold = $1,003/ounce
Silver $16.24/ ounce
Lets say you find a SILVER ring and a GOLD ring on the same day. With the above values in mind, which will be most worth your effort in the finding?
This is why I say eliminate all coins but nickels if you are serious about finding gold jewelry. Unless there is a known and serious opportunity to find numismatically significant silver coins, gold will reward you far more than anything else.
Chances are best that you will find only clad while notching in coins, while you waste time recovering them - time you could better use searching for gold jewelry.
As for "junk," gold jewelry hunters are really junk hunters. They delight in finding common trash, because they know one fact the rest choose to ignore:
High trash volumes mean more people... and more people mean increased chances at recovering financially rewarding gold jewelry.
Fortunately you have one of the best jewelry hunting detectors on the market - the ACE 250.
Simply notch in the mid range, from foil to screwcap, and exclude everything else. Then dig anything that beeps. Will you find a lot of trash? Yes. But you will spend your valuable time reacting to only those things that might be gold
It is all in your perspective, ya know?
When he suggested I notch out everything he met all silver and clad as well. I wanted to know why
the silver and clad too. I got back what I think is a logical response from dahut:
Consider this:
Gold = $1,003/ounce
Silver $16.24/ ounce
Lets say you find a SILVER ring and a GOLD ring on the same day. With the above values in mind, which will be most worth your effort in the finding?
This is why I say eliminate all coins but nickels if you are serious about finding gold jewelry. Unless there is a known and serious opportunity to find numismatically significant silver coins, gold will reward you far more than anything else.
Chances are best that you will find only clad while notching in coins, while you waste time recovering them - time you could better use searching for gold jewelry.
As for "junk," gold jewelry hunters are really junk hunters. They delight in finding common trash, because they know one fact the rest choose to ignore:
High trash volumes mean more people... and more people mean increased chances at recovering financially rewarding gold jewelry.
Fortunately you have one of the best jewelry hunting detectors on the market - the ACE 250.
Simply notch in the mid range, from foil to screwcap, and exclude everything else. Then dig anything that beeps. Will you find a lot of trash? Yes. But you will spend your valuable time reacting to only those things that might be gold
It is all in your perspective, ya know?