I have used my Omega for less than a month and have made some good finds with it. Most of these good finds have came from very trashy parks and fairgrounds and every time I got a wheat penny or silver coin I was surprised. I wanted to figure out the depth limits of this detector and it is hard to do while hunting trashy spots. I originally thought I could hear a deep signal better in one tone, but today's outing made a liar out of me. I went to a school that was closed in 1976 and has been in private ownership since that year. I got permission to hunt this old school four years ago and usually frequent it about twice a month. The back of the school is about two acres of mowed grass and believe it or not, it contains very little pulltabs and modern trash. I have found about 50 silver coins and many wheat pennies, most being with Explorers. These coins all are over 8 inches deep. It is an easy place to hunt with the short grass and lack of trash so I have hunted with little discrimination with any detector I have used here. It is a great spot to find out if a detector has enough guts to get to the coins. I last hunted here with my Etrac a couple of weeks ago and found 8 wheats, an old merc, and two buffalo nickles. Today I took the Omega and figured I could not consistantly get to the depth of these coins. I hunted for over an hour and a half and had only found one 1972 penny from 5 inches deep. I experimented with the tones, disc, and sens, but I could not get a signal that was deep. I was about ready to give up so I went to the area where I have found most of the older coins. I was in one tone and was hoping for a signal that I knew was a coin and was deep. Finally, I got that signal and I started playing with the settings. I got a quick, round blip in one tone that had a number of 82. I put it in three tone and got a faint, but disticnt high tone with a low 80's number. The depth gauge showed 6 inches. When I dug the plug, I was being very careful to not exagerate the depth. I finally found a green wheatie that was an honest 8 inches deep! Not a strong signal but a weak repeatable high tone. My confidence in the Omega was rejuvenated. I now started listening for identical signals and withing 5 minutes I got another similar signal. Another 8 inch deep wheatie. Shortly after I found a double sterling silver heart pendant from over 8 inches. One thing I have noticed is the depth gauge on the Omega almost always read shallower on deep coins. In other words, a eight inch penny will read 6 inches on the gauge. I believe that in my soil, I can get 8 to 9 inches of depth on a penny-dime and that is good to know. Add this type of depth with a fast response time and it makes for a nice detector. One other note, while in three tone mode, the deep coins were not at all loud so it is my opinion that a good set of headphones is a must. I use Killer B Hornets and they work well with the Omega. My final settings: disc 15, sensitivity 75, three tone, with a ground reading of 65. I could not get the detector to run stable over 75. I dig very little rusty iron with this detector, alot less than I do with my Explorers and Cz's of the past. It does like rusty bottlecaps. The deeper ones will high tone with numbers all over the place. Shallow caps will read a consistant 84 to 86 and high tone from all angles. I guess there is no perfect detector and even my Etrac is fooled by deep screwcaps or maybe I should say I am fooled. R.L.