A
Anonymous
Guest
Hello again!
Would there be any gain to having a detector with the ability to accept different coil designs?
For example (I think) the sensitivity and depth is affected by coil windings, capacitance and all that talk. However, I don't know if coils of different windings/capacitance can be used on the same detector.
A post below I asked if a detector/coil design could incorporate "Plug and Play".
This would allow the detector to use radically different coils to optimize for smaller objects, different ground etc.
I could have 3 8" coils. 1 optimized for depth/ large objects, another for small objects, and a third optimized for pinpointing.
The detector would recognize which was plugged in, and change its setup.
Sound interesting? I am trying to get creative juices flowing, don't see a lot of design talk lately.
Neal
Would there be any gain to having a detector with the ability to accept different coil designs?
For example (I think) the sensitivity and depth is affected by coil windings, capacitance and all that talk. However, I don't know if coils of different windings/capacitance can be used on the same detector.
A post below I asked if a detector/coil design could incorporate "Plug and Play".
This would allow the detector to use radically different coils to optimize for smaller objects, different ground etc.
I could have 3 8" coils. 1 optimized for depth/ large objects, another for small objects, and a third optimized for pinpointing.
The detector would recognize which was plugged in, and change its setup.
Sound interesting? I am trying to get creative juices flowing, don't see a lot of design talk lately.
Neal