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Ad says it goes four inches deep but the video looks more like two inches. Once the tide covers the day's drops much of the heavier rings can sink deeper than that and the sweeper is not cleaning up anything in the water ... which is where I do most of my beach detecting. Note how it is not shown picking up a single can ... I think there is not much to worry about from this sweeper.
I was looking for the link and then realized MSN was it.
I have a very wealthy town near me on the Jersey shore. Cant buy an outhouse for under a million dollars !!!! Hunting there was pathetic. Barely any coins let alone any jewelry. See, the rich are smart. They leave the good stuff home,Beach sweepers are designed to clean recent/daily drops of surface trash. If they happen to pick up any coins, rings, etc, that's a bonus for them but that's not the intent of the sweeper. It's a lot easier for the local town to have that motorized sweeper out there cleaning & smoothing out the sand, than to pay a ton of people to walk the beach to physically pick up trash. But just think about it from a physics standpoint, they can't go too deep into the sand because the deeper the sweeper tries digging into sand, the more resistance the sand would provide (ever see a tractor pull competition?), and the vehicle towing the sweeper would start spinning wheels and get stuck.
For the vehicle to move quickly and not get stuck, it needs minimal resistance from the sweeper, so it's only going down a few inches, just deep enough to get any recent trash drops. It's just like when we get a loud surface signal on the dry. We can just slide our scoop into the top layer of sand and pull up the target easily. But the deeper the target, the deeper we have to shove the scoop, and the deeper we dig, the more resistance we get, so the more effort & exertion we have to apply.
Also, regarding "cheaper" finds, i.e., rings made of metals other than Gold/Silver, junk jewelry, etc., one thing I think beach hunters forget is that they need to take into account the specific beach & location they're hunting. Where's the beach located? Is the beach in a lower/middle class neighborhood/area? Or is the beach located in a wealthier community where those with bigger bucks tend to visit? If you're hunting a beach in a more general, low/mid class area, I think that's where you will probably have a higher probability of finding non-Gold/Silver or less expensive jewelry.
But if you look at some find pics from hunters in Miami, they constantly post pics of Gold/Silver rings, bracelets, necklaces, earrings, and even some big diamond laced jewelry. But IMHO, that's because Miami is an area in FL that has people with the big bucks, i.e., lots of wealthier residents & tourists, yachts, businesses, expensive homes, etc. Lots of people in the Miami area make the bigger & BIG bucks, and wealthy people who hang with other wealthy people in areas where wealthy people hang out, will want to proudly show their jewelry. It's a status symbol kind of thing, i.e., "my diamonds are bigger than yours", lol.
Ya can't get caviar for the price of a gumball, so to increase your odds of finding high end Gold/Silver jewelry, gotta hit beaches that are frequented by people who can afford high end jewelry.
Hi Donna. Yeah, I'm sure some of them may indeed leave their good stuff at home, or in the safe of their hotel room. I'm not rich but I always do the same. I always take off my wedding ring & leave it at home before heading out to the beach to hunt. But as a detectorist, I know when I'm on the wet and in the water, my hands are gonna get wet with colder water, so my fingers are gonna shrink. One wrong move or a brief moment of distraction, and I could wind up hunting to find my own ring, lol. There may be some smart wealthy people that leave their bling at home or at the hotel, but there's also a lot of rich people who like to display their wealth via their jewelry for all to see, especially to those in their social circle.I have a very wealthy town near me on the Jersey shore. Cant buy an outhouse for under a million dollars !!!! Hunting there was pathetic. Barely any coins let alone any jewelry. See, the rich are smart. They leave the good stuff home,
I think those big gold chains were an 80's or 90's kinda thing? I seem to recall seeing them on some of the older TV shows. I was just thinking about this the other day. I think it depends on the generation of the person. Back when I was a kid, everyone wore a gold or silver wedding band, gold or silver necklaces, bracelets, earrings, etc. That's what we had back then and that's what everyone was used to. I was a kid in the late 50's/early 60's, and back then, we had never heard of a Titanium or Platinum ring, or ring made out of composites, or I've even seen some rings made out of wood. People from my generation, and even a few subsequent generations were more inclined to follow tradition, seemed to be more important back then.Unfortunately today, hardly anyone wears real gold jewelry. Just walk down the beach and most guys arent wearing those big gold chains from days of old.
Yes, you need to go where the money is but I bet its extremely slim pickins.