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Boy I'm glad I dug that "nail" signal!

MickTwin

Member
Back this afternoon on the same lawn where I found the 4 silvers and a wheat in the same hole http://www.findmall.com/read.php?58,1418092. I wasn't having luck in much of the other parts of the lawn.. most of my finds were rust encrusted iron nails, bolts, and aluminum scraps.

I was taking it slow.. I figured there HAD to be more silver that the iron had masked during my last hunt. Still armed with my Delta 4000 and stock 8" concentric coil (boy I wish I had the 5" DD), I was digging everything that wasn't an "obvious" iron signal. I used stock settings (you turn on the machine and go), with two exceptions: I included iron in the discrimination so I could hear the low grunts the Delta makes when it passes over ferrous targets (discrimination set at 10) and the volume was increased from 8 to 10.

I had a good dime signal (finally) and dug a 1948 Rosie at 3 inches. Then I came across a target that gave a jumpy signal. It bounced from the 20's to high 80's in all directions. I was so sure that it was a nail that I said to myself, "I know this is a rusty nail". Remember I'm still learning this Delta 4000 (the only one I own) and I try to play games by betting what the target is BEFORE I dig it up. I am getting much better at winning these bets, but this time - boy was I wrong!

To prove to myself that it WAS a rusty nail I started cutting into the grass. It wasn't in the plug so I laid out my cloth and started piling dirt from the hole on top of it. My pro pointer didn't beep when I lowered it into the hole, so I knew it had it had to be on the cloth. Sure enough laying there was a 1926 Mercury silver dime!

But WHY had the signal been so jumpy? I started filling the hole when I noticed on the cloth was the bottom half of a pull tab! It must have been buried next to the dime. Lesson learned... never take anything for granted. Just because you are sure that your target is trash doesn't mean it actually is! We all probably pass up plenty of valuable targets with erratic signals that we assume are junk signals.

Oh well, that just leaves some for the next guy! Oh yeah, I bagged another Merc (1936) before the afternoon was through :)
:usmc:MickTwin
http://img687.imageshack.us/img687/1497/rye2011030800213.jpg
 
nice silver finds
 
I love that game, Question that you repeated, that you had a lot of iron laying around. Well, how close was the next bit of iron, to what you where digging? I will bet, that you had a nail or some sort of leaching over from the nail close. The ground is made to destroy all non living things, with the salt in the ground, the salt will start breaking down the metal and returning it to the state in which it started from. Look at modern day pennies just a few years in the ground and talk about a bad penny. I am assuming, that you have the stock coil on that detector?

HH
Ken
 
The Delta w/stock 8" coil is definitely a very competitive detector for most coin hunting needs. Learning a detector is always quite important and even a 'basic' model, like the Delta, still conveys the same types of responses we all can get. That is, mixed signals from mixed-metal targets or a mix or close proximity targets.

The 5" DD might have helped with some of the trash you're dealing with, but regardless of the coil used, there will still be times that target masking must be met with an aggressive challenge to question it. Mixed signals, like you had, are the ones many people bypass, but savvy hunters make a recovery. Good or bad, they make the recovery and then know what to expect.

Monte
 
Man you are cleaning up on that silver Mick!! Good deal! I did a similar thing at my sis in law's house the other day. I have pounded that yard hard over the years and decided to give it a go with the NELS coil while I was there. No solid targets for about an hour then a bouncy high tone/iron but it was consistent. Wheat cent 5 inches deep. I know I have passed over this target many times before. Just gives more credibility to your post. I am DYING to find another silver coin. Only 2 in 2 and 1/2 years. Location, location,location... HH my friend.

capt.
 
Nice finds my friend :teknetics:#1
 
Dug a 1897 quarter about two weeks ago that was jumping between foil and a dime. It must have been on edge because after it was out of the hole it rang up as a quarter at 89...
 
The 'key' tip off is that the meter spiked to to the '80's' and was repeatable to the '80's' from different directions. Usually indicates a co-located non-ferrous good target near a non-desireable target. My 18 yr old White's does that along with my T2. Good call on your decision to dig.
 
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