Critterhunter
New member
I figured I'd write a quick explanation of separation, recovery speed, sweep speed, and unmasking ability as I see these features get confused more often than not. I'm guilty myself of say mixing up sweep speed and recovery speed, or recovery speed and separation. In some way they can all be related but only for specific reasons.
First off, separation- To understand separation you should first understand coil designs. Separation is based on how big the detection field is in the ground. A DD coil tends to have better separation at any depth based on it's thin detection line from tip to toe of the coil versus the round cone shaped signal that gets thinner as it gets deeper of a concentric. A concentric can separate targets best at it's very tip of the field where it's the deepest in the ground, but maybe still not as good as a DD. A DD's detection field will be just as useful near the coil as it is at it's deepest part, and it's thin line has various other advantages over a concentrics round "ice cream cone" type signal including seeing less ground minerals and offering less potential risk at missing targets.
The other advantage to a DD is that it's equal in depth from tip to toe where as a concentric is only deepest at it's very center in a small spot. For that reason a concentric the same size as a DD can have just a hair more depth, but only in a small spot at it's very center. Concentrics there for need to have the sweep overlapped a lot in order to not miss deeper targets. If there are any kind of ground minerals the DD will quickly get deeper than the same sized concentric. Even with low ground minerals so that the concentric isn't blending or degrading the target signal with all the ground signal it's also taking in, once a concentric gets past maybe 10 or 11" it may still be shallower than a DD due to the DD's ability to maintain sensitivity to small items even at this size of a coil or larger. As a concentric coil gets bigger than say 11 or 12" it starts losing sensitivity to coin/ring sized targets, while DD coils can get as big as 14 or 15" and still retain good small target sensitivity.
With all the above being said about separation it usually means a small coil will get better separation than a larger one as it's detection field is smaller. Some coils can squeeze the DD detection field by being an odd shaped, such as the 15x12 discussed in the other thread or ovals and eclipses. In those cases coils like this can have a thinner field than a smaller coil but go just as deep as a larger coil. Obviously separation is largely based on signal size and not really based on anything else.
Recovery speed is how fast the machine resets once it goes over a target so that it's ready to see the next one. Some say machines with a fast recovery speed separate targets better than ones with a slow recovery speed. While this can be true to some extent, this reason is more based on the sweep speed of the detector than how fast it recovers over a target so that it can see the next one. Slow down your sweep speed and give the machine time to reset and recovery speed shouldn't be a factor in separation. Ask yourself this, would you rather have a fast recovery speed with a big fat detection field or a slow recovery speed with a thin detection field to "see" between two targets? I'd rather have that, and a DD or especially one of these SEF coils will offer you that over a concentric.
Unmasking ability is the ability to see say a coin that is mixed in with a piece of trash or iron. Separation and recovery speed can be a factor in this "unmasking". If you are using a detector with a fast recovery speed it may in fact be fast enough to reset and "unmask" the two targets separately even if you are swinging the coil fast. However, once the two targets "become one" in that they are laying on top of each other or touching no amount of recovery or sweep speed can compensate. Now it's up to two things- the detection field and the detector's ability to analyze the signal and try to separate the coin from the junk. Certain detection fields may hit certain multiple targets better, allowing the detector to pick up the coin and not have it's field deflected by the junk. If the coil's field can only hit the junk and has no eddy currents that are being allowed to also hit the coin then the detector only sees the trash and not the coin. It doesn't even have a chance to try to decipher the two targets from the signal. Some coils seem to hit certain masked targets or coins on edge better than others because of the dynamics of the fields they are transmitting into the ground. These SEF coils are said to have some kind of morphed hybrid detection field that is mostly a DD but also has some concentric traits. For that reason they may unmask coins that these coils like while your "average" concentric or DD coil seems to have a hard time hitting properly.
The other way a masked target like this may be revealed is by how the detector handles a "mixed" signal. That's another place where the Sovereign shines because Iron Mask ON is specially designed to analyze a signal and draw the good target ID out of it while ignoring the bad. It can either do this by totally disregarding the junk signal, or at least not letting it cause the "averaged" two target signal be drawn too far down the conductivity scale to where you wouldn't recognize the value of the good target that is mixed in with it. I've found that I can get either perfect coin IDs or ones only 3 or 4 digits below a 180 signal even when the junk I used to mask the signal was iron or a low conductivity non-ferrous item such as a pulltab. The Sovereign is better at this than any machine I've used, including the Explorer.
Sweep speed is both what the detector needs to remain stable and also what you should sweep it at to allow the detector time to reset between targets. Sweep a machine too fast or too slow and the detector can no longer keep it's self stable in relation to ground minerals or targets. Most say a slow to medium (but still leaning on the slow side) sweep speed is what the Sovereign prefers. However, most also say that once a deep target is found you should wiggle the coil as short and fast as possible directly over the target to pull the best ID out of it. This isn't unique to the Sovereign. On my QXT Pro, which can handle a very slow to very fast sweep speed while hunting, deep targets still require short/fast sweeps (but not wiggles like the Sovereign) to obtain the best target ID.
First off, separation- To understand separation you should first understand coil designs. Separation is based on how big the detection field is in the ground. A DD coil tends to have better separation at any depth based on it's thin detection line from tip to toe of the coil versus the round cone shaped signal that gets thinner as it gets deeper of a concentric. A concentric can separate targets best at it's very tip of the field where it's the deepest in the ground, but maybe still not as good as a DD. A DD's detection field will be just as useful near the coil as it is at it's deepest part, and it's thin line has various other advantages over a concentrics round "ice cream cone" type signal including seeing less ground minerals and offering less potential risk at missing targets.
The other advantage to a DD is that it's equal in depth from tip to toe where as a concentric is only deepest at it's very center in a small spot. For that reason a concentric the same size as a DD can have just a hair more depth, but only in a small spot at it's very center. Concentrics there for need to have the sweep overlapped a lot in order to not miss deeper targets. If there are any kind of ground minerals the DD will quickly get deeper than the same sized concentric. Even with low ground minerals so that the concentric isn't blending or degrading the target signal with all the ground signal it's also taking in, once a concentric gets past maybe 10 or 11" it may still be shallower than a DD due to the DD's ability to maintain sensitivity to small items even at this size of a coil or larger. As a concentric coil gets bigger than say 11 or 12" it starts losing sensitivity to coin/ring sized targets, while DD coils can get as big as 14 or 15" and still retain good small target sensitivity.
With all the above being said about separation it usually means a small coil will get better separation than a larger one as it's detection field is smaller. Some coils can squeeze the DD detection field by being an odd shaped, such as the 15x12 discussed in the other thread or ovals and eclipses. In those cases coils like this can have a thinner field than a smaller coil but go just as deep as a larger coil. Obviously separation is largely based on signal size and not really based on anything else.
Recovery speed is how fast the machine resets once it goes over a target so that it's ready to see the next one. Some say machines with a fast recovery speed separate targets better than ones with a slow recovery speed. While this can be true to some extent, this reason is more based on the sweep speed of the detector than how fast it recovers over a target so that it can see the next one. Slow down your sweep speed and give the machine time to reset and recovery speed shouldn't be a factor in separation. Ask yourself this, would you rather have a fast recovery speed with a big fat detection field or a slow recovery speed with a thin detection field to "see" between two targets? I'd rather have that, and a DD or especially one of these SEF coils will offer you that over a concentric.
Unmasking ability is the ability to see say a coin that is mixed in with a piece of trash or iron. Separation and recovery speed can be a factor in this "unmasking". If you are using a detector with a fast recovery speed it may in fact be fast enough to reset and "unmask" the two targets separately even if you are swinging the coil fast. However, once the two targets "become one" in that they are laying on top of each other or touching no amount of recovery or sweep speed can compensate. Now it's up to two things- the detection field and the detector's ability to analyze the signal and try to separate the coin from the junk. Certain detection fields may hit certain multiple targets better, allowing the detector to pick up the coin and not have it's field deflected by the junk. If the coil's field can only hit the junk and has no eddy currents that are being allowed to also hit the coin then the detector only sees the trash and not the coin. It doesn't even have a chance to try to decipher the two targets from the signal. Some coils seem to hit certain masked targets or coins on edge better than others because of the dynamics of the fields they are transmitting into the ground. These SEF coils are said to have some kind of morphed hybrid detection field that is mostly a DD but also has some concentric traits. For that reason they may unmask coins that these coils like while your "average" concentric or DD coil seems to have a hard time hitting properly.
The other way a masked target like this may be revealed is by how the detector handles a "mixed" signal. That's another place where the Sovereign shines because Iron Mask ON is specially designed to analyze a signal and draw the good target ID out of it while ignoring the bad. It can either do this by totally disregarding the junk signal, or at least not letting it cause the "averaged" two target signal be drawn too far down the conductivity scale to where you wouldn't recognize the value of the good target that is mixed in with it. I've found that I can get either perfect coin IDs or ones only 3 or 4 digits below a 180 signal even when the junk I used to mask the signal was iron or a low conductivity non-ferrous item such as a pulltab. The Sovereign is better at this than any machine I've used, including the Explorer.
Sweep speed is both what the detector needs to remain stable and also what you should sweep it at to allow the detector time to reset between targets. Sweep a machine too fast or too slow and the detector can no longer keep it's self stable in relation to ground minerals or targets. Most say a slow to medium (but still leaning on the slow side) sweep speed is what the Sovereign prefers. However, most also say that once a deep target is found you should wiggle the coil as short and fast as possible directly over the target to pull the best ID out of it. This isn't unique to the Sovereign. On my QXT Pro, which can handle a very slow to very fast sweep speed while hunting, deep targets still require short/fast sweeps (but not wiggles like the Sovereign) to obtain the best target ID.
) as to exactly what the benefits of various coils and functions of a machine are, as well as the negatives. I look forward to hearing more differing opinion on these matters to continue the exchange of ideas.